Actually it may be a good move to make it cheaper when thinking of transitions. Given that the customers who buy DVD, for whatever reason to not having a Blu ray player, could save some cash to put aside for buying a blu-ray player in the future. Eventually when they phase out the DVD version, the higher costing blu-rays will be there for purchase as they didn't have to test out what compromise price to sell at. Assuming of course that those customers would be interested in saving up for a blu-ray. Besides as noted it would be pretty dishonest to pump the price of DVD's when thanks to technology printing it costs much less than it did before, Blu-ray isn't at that point yet but will get there, and you'd just offend customers. Course you could lower Blu-ray but then you'd be lowering your costs of recovery, which is currently higher than DVD.ShowsOn wrote:If Criterion wants to encourage its customers to upgrade to Blu-ray, they should make the DVD editions more expensive, not cheaper.Jeff wrote:I'm thinking that this might actually be a new pricing structure, and part of a very gradual eventual phasing out of standard DVDs for most new titles (like MoC).HistoryProf wrote:Very very interesting that TRL and Mr. Lawrence are both listed at $29.95 for 2 disc DVDs and $39.95 for blu...would be a fantastic development if it holds.
In addition, since you have certain margin of customers who are inelastic, i.e. those who continue to buy DVD, you'd be able to entice prospective customers as well, those with blu-ray players who really want the film but may not have much cash to fork over so instead may have opted to rent or wait for a sale/whatever to lower the price to that level.
Edit: Course that is if the price listing isn't an error on their side.