JustaFied
04-22-2004, 07:05 AM
April 22, 2004
Straight to DVD
The idea of chronological generations may have to be set aside. The world we live in now is really measured in technological periods, which have no fixed length and overlap in wildly unpredictable ways. Each of our tools, each of our toys, seems to be rushing us into the future or holding us back. Consider the DVD.
The DVD is an object both feared and loved in Hollywood. DVD sales have changed the economics of moviemaking, and so has the illegal pirating of DVD's. Even a film like "Finding Nemo," which did very well at the box office, is doing even better on DVD. And more than a few people are holding their breath to see what "The Passion of the Christ" does when it is released on DVD, not to mention the director's cut of the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy.
Consumers have unequivocally embraced DVD's, much as they have CD's. And yet an enormous number of people find themselves in a curious state of transition. Some people can't help thinking of DVD's, which offer nonlinear access to their contents, in the linear terms of videotape. Some have fallen in love with the special features — outtakes, interviews, extra footage — jammed onto new DVD's. The clutter bewilders others.
In a way, it's surprising how happily we all wander through the forest of media formats. The reason isn't that we love novelty. It's that we love repetition. This becomes clearer if you think back to the days when movies could be seen only in actual theaters. They came and went, leaving only a memory behind. Now they appear and reappear and reappear, preserved in a format, the DVD, that resists even the gradual degradation of videotape. The catalog grows and grows, and so does the number of times we've watched our favorite movies. The real novelty of this technological era is our indulgence in repetition.
And, of course, it's going to get more complicated. It won't be very long before a new generation of DVD's, suitable for high-definition television, appears. They will hold a couple of hours of HDTV but more than a day's worth of the standard TV format. They will require new players, but they will play all your old DVD's, too. Those machines will only compound our conundrum: in a wilderness of choices, do we tend to make the same ones again and again?
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Straight to DVD
The idea of chronological generations may have to be set aside. The world we live in now is really measured in technological periods, which have no fixed length and overlap in wildly unpredictable ways. Each of our tools, each of our toys, seems to be rushing us into the future or holding us back. Consider the DVD.
The DVD is an object both feared and loved in Hollywood. DVD sales have changed the economics of moviemaking, and so has the illegal pirating of DVD's. Even a film like "Finding Nemo," which did very well at the box office, is doing even better on DVD. And more than a few people are holding their breath to see what "The Passion of the Christ" does when it is released on DVD, not to mention the director's cut of the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy.
Consumers have unequivocally embraced DVD's, much as they have CD's. And yet an enormous number of people find themselves in a curious state of transition. Some people can't help thinking of DVD's, which offer nonlinear access to their contents, in the linear terms of videotape. Some have fallen in love with the special features — outtakes, interviews, extra footage — jammed onto new DVD's. The clutter bewilders others.
In a way, it's surprising how happily we all wander through the forest of media formats. The reason isn't that we love novelty. It's that we love repetition. This becomes clearer if you think back to the days when movies could be seen only in actual theaters. They came and went, leaving only a memory behind. Now they appear and reappear and reappear, preserved in a format, the DVD, that resists even the gradual degradation of videotape. The catalog grows and grows, and so does the number of times we've watched our favorite movies. The real novelty of this technological era is our indulgence in repetition.
And, of course, it's going to get more complicated. It won't be very long before a new generation of DVD's, suitable for high-definition television, appears. They will hold a couple of hours of HDTV but more than a day's worth of the standard TV format. They will require new players, but they will play all your old DVD's, too. Those machines will only compound our conundrum: in a wilderness of choices, do we tend to make the same ones again and again?
Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company | Home | Privacy Policy | Search | Corrections | Help | Back to Top