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updated: 1/16/01
The Bits
@ VSDA/CES 2001
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Well....
it's sad but true. This year's Video Software Association Show (VSDA) was
probably the worst its been in years. For the first time, the show was held in
conjunction with the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, and CES
tended to dominate the weekend. Very few new DVD announcements were made at VSDA
this year and most studios opted against having a presence on the show floor
(holding meetings in private conference rooms instead). Walking the floor was an
exercise in tedium. Frankly, there was more action happening at the Adult Video
News Show (AVN), which was going on in the next exhibit hall at the Sands
Convention Center. A LOT more action.
Still, we did talk with representatives from a number of studios, so here's a
look at what they told us...
First of all, Columbia TriStar made the event's biggest announcement, by
revealing that Lawrence of Arabia will
debut as a 2-disc limited edition on April 3rd (SRP $39.95). The set will
feature a new anamorphic, high-definition transfer of the restored print of the
film, with remixed Dolby Digital 5.1 sound. An hour-long documentary on the
making of the film will also be included, along with some 8 other featurettes on
the costumes, locations, publicity and even the film's premiere. There will also
be a gallery of photos and production artwork, and a collectible booklet, as
well as a conversation with director Steven Spielberg on the film. Tentatively
set for late May (pending Spielberg's final approval) is a 2-disc special
edition of Close Encounters of the Third Kind,
which will feature Spielberg's new 137-minute, "Collector's Edition"
director's cut of the film (the cut that was recently released on VHS and
laserdisc, which thankfully restores the film's original theatrical ending). The
set will feature deleted footage and "making of" featurettes, as well
as new material. The film will be in anamorphic widescreen, with Dolby Digital
5.1 audio (it MAY also feature DTS 5.1 audio as well). We've been told that
April should also see the DVD release of The Natural
and The Prince of Tides, while Ice
Castles, Absence of Malice and
Tootsie are likely for May. The studio
also confirmed that it's working on special edition re-releases of A
Few Good Men and My Best Friend's Wedding
(a re-release of Fly Away Home is also on
the way), as well as Gandhi and Kramer
vs. Kramer. Vertical Limit,
Finding Forrester and Snatch
are all planned for release during the first half of the year, and Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon is already done. The disc had to be completed
early for it's impending Region 3 release in Asia, and is tentatively slated for
late Spring release here in the States. One word of note - the R1 disc will
include anamorphic widescreen and even more bonus material that will be found on
the R3 disc. Other upcoming DVDs from the studio include Agent
Red, Avalon, Roughnecks:
Starship Trooper Chronicles, The Story of
Jacob and Joseph, The Tao of Steve
(all 3/13), A Passage to India (3/20) and
Charlie's Angles and Girlfight
(both 3/27). Finally, look for a boxed set of all of the Muppet movies before
the year is done (to include The Muppet Movie,
The Great Muppet Caper and The
Muppets Take Manhattan - the titles will be available separately as
well).
Paramount's got a busy year planned for DVD. First of all, their DVD release of
Wonder Boys has been delayed to see how
the film fares during award season (it will likely be rescheduled for late
February or March). You Can Count on Me
and Sunshine will also be scheduled
pending their respective award nominations. And Ordinary
People has been delayed as well, because director Robert Redford has
agreed to record a commentary for the disc. March should see a number of classic
Paramount Audrey Hepburn films find their way to DVD (as well as John Travolta's
Lucky Numbers), while April will see a
spate of romantic classics from the studio on disc (including a Ghost:
Special Edition - no kidding!). This summer, to coincide with the
release of Buena Vista's Pearl Harbor,
Paramount will debut several World War II films on DVD. Summer will also see
more Paramount Westerns released on disc, including Sergio Leone's Once
Upon a Time in the West and several classic John Wayne films (The
Man Who Shot Liberty Valance anyone?). Star
Trek: The Next Generation is still in the works for late 2001, and
the much-talked-about Star Trek: The Motion Picture:
Director's Edition should debut in the 3rd Qtr of the year. Special
editions of the Friday the 13th series are
possibilities for Halloween. You can also expect a DVD release of What
Women Want by the summer, while Rugrats in
Paris is due on 3/27. Finally, look for a couple BIG catalog titles
to round out the year for the holidays (my sources are telling me to watch for
The Godfather Trilogy and Forrest
Gump). The Indiana Jones Trilogy
will likely find its way to DVD in 2002.
Universal is working on a number of big catalog titles, including Schindler's
List and E.T. (E.T.
is for 2002, but Schindler's should arrive
in the 4th Qtr of 2001). Their Legend: Collector's
Edition 2-disc set is currently being improved and should be out
before spring, although no new street date has been set. Look for The
Back to the Future Trilogy to be a summer release, and collector's
edition DVDs of How the Grinch Stole Christmas,
The Mummy Returns and Jurassic
Park III will all be released before the year is through. The studio
has set March 20th as the street date for Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber's
Jesus Christ Superstar. And, as you've
already heard, the studio is expected to release The
Mummy: Ultimate Edition 2-disc set on April 24th. The set will
include both anamorphic widescreen and full frame versions of the film, along
with Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS 5.1 audio, the original script (via the "script-to-screen"
feature on DVD-ROM), all the extras that were on the earlier disc plus new
material and a sneak peek at The Mummy Returns
(which arrives in theaters on May 11th). SRP is $29.98.
Speaking of Universal, the studio distributes DreamWorks DVD product in
addition to their own. From DreamWorks, you can expect The
Watcher, Billy Elliot, The
Contender, The Legend of Bagger Vance
and Almost Famous, all by March or April.
Warner is working to release more TV product on DVD, and is also quietly
remastering all of the Kubrick Collection titles (including 2001,
which will be re-released as a special edition late in the year). Production is
heating up on the Blade Runner: Special Edition
(also for late 2001) and May should see the release of the 2-disc Superman:
Special Edition, along with all the sequels as more basic editions
and a boxed set of all 4 films. Citizen Kane
and Dr. Zhivago are in production, as are
Proof of Life, Best
in Show, Waiting for Guffman
and Miss Congeniality (the latter 4 should
be out by summer). Look for the first Looney Toons
releases in 2001 as well. From Warner distributed labels, New Line is currently
working on Gummo, Dancer
in the Dark (both for March 20th), Bamboozled,
Little Nicky (April) and Dungeons
and Dragons (May or June). They're also collecting special edition
materials for The Lord of the Rings DVDs,
the first of which should be released in 2002. And HBO is currently working on
the complete second seasons of Sex and the City
and The Sopranos for DVD (we're told to
expect them in May).
Fox's DVD release plans include Enemy Mine
(3/20), Zardoz (3/20), Alien
Nation (3/20), Cleopatra: 5-Star Edition
(3-discs - 4/3), The X-Files: The Complete Third
Season (5/8), Big Trouble in Little China:
Special Edition (2-discs - DD & DTS - 5/22), Point
Break (DD & DTS - 5/22), Chain
Reaction (5/22), Die Hard: 5-Star Edition
(2-discs - DD & DTS - 6/26), Die Hard 2: Die
Harder - Special Edition (DD & DTS - 6/26), Die
Hard with a Vengeance: Special Edition (DD & DTS - 6/26) and The
Marilyn Monroe: The Diamond Collection (5/29 - SRP $99.95), which
features Bus Stop, Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes, How to Marry a Millionaire,
The Seven Year Itch and There's
No Business Like Show Business. These films will also be available
separately, although the set will include a 6th disc exclusive of Marilyn
Monroe: The Final Days and her last film, Something's
Got to Give. The studio's Bedazzled
DVD (set for 3/13) will be the first major studio release to feature Nuon
enhancement, which means that if you have a Nuon-capable DVD player, you'll get
access to dynamic commentaries, enhanced art galleries and lots more (note that
you don't need Nuon to enjoy most of the material on the disc - you'll just get
more interactivity out of it if you do). DVD versions of Castaway
and Dude Where's My Car? are expected
before summer, and M.A.S.H. will be
released as a 5-Star edition later in the year. The studio will debut more TV
product on DVD in 2001 as well, with The X-Files: The
Complete Fourth Season and Buffy the
Vampire Slayer: The Complete First Season slated for late in the year
(The Simpsons and the TV series M.A.S.H.
are also planned for 2001). And while the studio will say nothing on the record,
I have very reliable word that Star Wars: Episode I -
The Phantom Menace will be a late 2001 release on DVD, as at least a
2-disc set (and maybe 3 discs). Episode I
will be the only Star Wars film to arrive
on DVD this year however.
USA Entertainment's Nurse Betty will be
released April, and we're hearing that Traffic
should be out by summer (pending award season performance).
Lion's Gate will debut Wim Wenders' Million Dollar
Hotel: Millennium Series to DVD on April 3rd (starring Mel Gibson,
Jimmy Smits, Milla Jovovich and Jeremy Davies). The DVD, which SRPs for $24.98,
will feature audio commentary with Wenders and U2's Bono (who wrote the
soundtrack), along with the never-before-seen U2 Ground
Beneath Her Feet music video.
Artisan's Requiem for a Dream is slated
for 3/20 and their Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2
DVD (also 3/20) will be the "worlds first DVD+CD disc". That means
that the disc will be dual-sided - one side will hold the DVD-Video content,
while the other side will include songs from the film's soundtrack that will
play in any CD or DVD player.
Rhino fans will be thrilled to learn that The
Transformers TV series will debut on DVD in 2001, along with episodes
of G.I. Joe, Inhumanoids,
Robotix, My
Little Pony and Battle of the Planets.
Finally, Buena Vista is expected to release The
Hunchback of Notre Dame II (slated for September) and the studio's
first Platinum edition DVD, Snow White and the Seven
Dwarves (October). Their Dimension label's Highlander:
Endgame DVD (2/20) will feature an all new director's cut of the
film, with tons of new footage and an all-new ending. Buena Vista was otherwise
close-lipped at VSDA, but we hear that Miramax Collector's Editions are in the
works for The English Patient,
Kieslowski's Blue, White
and Red and Pulp
Fiction.
So those are the titles we heard about at the show. We were also hoping to
attend the annual VDSA DVD Festival, which includes Leonard Maltin's popular
director's panel discussion on DVD. This year's panel was to have featured Bryan
Singer (X-Men), Paul Verhoeven (Hollow
Man) and Curtis Hanson (Wonder Boys)
among others. Unfortunately, the festival was cancelled at the last minute - go
figure.
One portion of the DVD Festival that wasn't cancelled, however, was the 2nd
Annual DVD Festival Awards. Digital Bits
editor Bill Hunt (yours truly) served as a judge for the event, along with
representatives from DVD File, DVD
Review, Daily Variety, The
Dallas Morning News, Entertainment Weekly,
The Hollywood Reporter, The
Movie Guys, Video Store
magazine, Video Business magazine and The
New Movie Show. The awards were presented in a special cocktail party
reception on Monday evening, and were hosted by Chris Gore (of Film
Threat, Total Movie and host of
The New Movie Show). As always, there was
controversy. While I agree with many of the awards, I think Fight
Club got smoked. And you should note that Buena Vista declined to
participate. Here's a list of the top nominees and winners in each category (the
winner is highlighted in Yellow):
BEST USE OF MENU FEATURES
The Abyss (Fox)
Men in Black (Columbia TriStar)
Mission: Impossible 2 (Paramount)
T2: The Ultimate Edition (Artisan)
The World is Not Enough (MGM)
BEST SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL PRESENTATION
Fight Club (Fox)
Men in Black (Columbia TriStar)
Gladiator (DreamWorks)
T2: The Ultimate Edition (Artisan)
BEST USE OF DVD-ROM FEATURES
Mission: Impossible 2 (Paramount)
Chicken Run (DreamWorks)
T2: The Ultimate Edition (Artisan)
BEST USE OF AUDIO/LANGUAGE TRACKS
Bridge on the River Kwai - TIE - (Columbia
TriStar)
Galaxy Quest (DreamWorks)
The Rocky Horror Picture Show - TIE -
(Fox)
BEST MUSIC DVD - NON-THEATRICAL
Beach Boys: Endless Harmony (EMI/Capitol)
Miles Davis: Montreal Jazz Festival
(Pioneer)
Santana: The Supernatural Tour (BMG)
BEST MUSIC DVD - THEATRICAL
Annie Get Your Gun (Warner)
The Sound of Music (Fox)
This is Spinal Tap (MGM)
BEST AUDIO PRESENTATION
Fight Club (Fox)
Jurassic Park (Universal)
Gladiator (DreamWorks)
T2: The Ultimate Edition (Artisan)
BEST VIDEO PRESENTATION
X-Men (Fox)
North by Northwest (Warner)
Gladiator (DreamWorks)
BEST DVD COMMENTARY
Fight Club (Fox)
The Limey (Artisan)
This is Spinal Tap (MGM)
BEST OF SHOW - NON-THEATRICAL
Satchmo: The Louie Armstrong Story (Sony
Music)
Sex and the City: The Complete First Season
(HBO)
Treasures from the American Film Archives
(Image)
BEST OF SHOW - ADULT
Dreamquest (Wicked Pictures)
Jekyll & Hyde (Vivid)
White Lightning (VCA)
BEST OF SHOW - CHILDREN'S
Stuart Little (Columbia TriStar)
Blue's Big Musical Movie (Paramount)
Tangerine Bear (Artisan)
Chicken Run (DreamWorks)
BEST OF SHOW - THEATRICAL
Gladiator (DreamWorks)
Fight Club (Fox)
T2: The Ultimate Edition (Artisan)
So that covers the DVD end of VSDA. Next we'll take a look at the state of the
DVD format as a whole, including a visit to the DVD Entertainment Group's annual
reception (which featured a look at the launch of DVD-Audio) and our experience
at CES. |
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