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News The Disney+ (The New Streaming Service) Thread

I wonder how they will be with extras for their newer movies... Will those be included, or will they remain as incentives to at least sell a few blu rays?
 
I don't think I've ever seen a streaming service like this include any extras. The only time I've seen extras with a digital version is when you buy them.
 
That was pretty much my reaction as well. I know we've talked about it before on here, but I still find it weird how Avatar is one the all time top movies at the box office, but yet it doesn't seem to be that popular. They always make a big deal out of it when news about Avatar comes up, but the general reaction to it seems almost always be a giant collective shrug.

I think it's fallen off the radar for a lot of people. Other franchises have replaced it-- like Marvel movies. I would even say it's not really a franchise--does 1 movie and a theme park ride make a movie a franchise? And, beyond the incredible digital landscapes and the 3D, was there a character that people latched onto? A ship? It's basically Aliens in design. The story is ok.

Maybe that will all change when the sequels come out.
 
I am very curious to see what kind of reaction the first trailer for the second one gets.
I think the biggest thing is the fact that until recently they didn't really do anything with it beyond the movie. It took 8 years for the Disney park attraction to open, and for the first standalone comic, and then another 2 before the first comic miniseries.
Shortly after the movie came out Cameron had talked about writing a novel that would have gone even deeper into the worldbuilding for Pandora and it's inhabitants, but sadly that never ended up happening.
 
Meh.

The best thing about the movie--and the only thing I really enjoyed--was the immersive 3D experience, which isn't possible in my house. So... skip!
Hell, that was my least favorite part of the film because the 3D shit gave me a headache (compare Gravity, where the 3D was used to enhance the film, not overwhelm it). The only good thing about that film is that it's pretty. That's it.
 
They really seemed to want to emphasize that Avatar would be available in all 5 launch territories, US, Canada, Netherlands, Australia, and New Zealand. (With those last two obviously waiting til the 19th.)

I look forward to seeing what differences pop up in different countries.
 
Avatar was an event movie that didn't try to be anything but a fun roller-coaster ride with an anti-colonial, pro-environmental message slapped on the front, and that was all well and good IMO.

Whether it has the chops to sustain a franchise remains to be seen, but James Cameron has a track record of breaking records, so I'm not about to bet against him just yet.
 
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I don't think I've ever seen a streaming service like this include any extras. The only time I've seen extras with a digital version is when you buy them.

I believe the Shout Factory App has some commentaries.
 
So they just announced this morning that Avengers Endgame will be available on launch day next week, instead of the originally planned release in December.
 
So they just announced this morning that Avengers Endgame will be available on launch day next week, instead of the originally planned release in December.

Oh, wow. That's cool.

*starts wondering how long my netflix account will remain active.*
 
I subscribe to Hulu, Netlfix, Amazon Prime, CBS AA and I'll be adding Disney+ next week, and at this point if I get rid of any of them it'll probably be Netflix. A lot of the acquired stuff is going to start moving over to the studio specific services, and with it's price now, I'm just not sure if I'm I like the stuff that will be staying enough to justify the price. Stranger Things and Lost In Space are the big two of their originals I watch, and I can always just get them on Blu Ray if I want to watch them.
 
I subscribe to Hulu, Netlfix, Amazon Prime, CBS AA and I'll be adding Disney+ next week, and at this point if I get rid of any of them it'll probably be Netflix. A lot of the acquired stuff is going to start moving over to the studio specific services, and with it's price now, I'm just not sure if I'm I like the stuff that will be staying enough to justify the price. Stranger Things and Lost In Space are the big two of their originals I watch, and I can always just get them on Blu Ray if I want to watch them.

I think Netflix is more vulnerable to the streaming wars than most people think. The other companies that are coming up with streaming services don't have the debt and they also have the back catalog of material. HBOmax is expensive, but, they have a lot of stuff. Just like Disney +.

There aren't many shows on netflix I'm passionate about. Lost in Space, yeah. But, I still haven't watched Jessica Jones or Daredevil season 3, and I really liked those shows. GLOW season 3, meh. So... yeah.
 
Doesn't Netflix have something like $12 billion in debt or something insane like that?
 
Doesn't Netflix have something like $12 billion in debt or something insane like that?

I'm not sure if it's that high, last I heard it was 5 or 6 billion. The challenge for them is revenue. Disney and Warners can stick their movies in a movie theater and sell merchandise on a grand scale, whereas Netflix only has subscribers... (yes, yes, they sell some merchandise on some shows... but, I could build rooms from the shit Disney sells.) And Amazon Prime could probably be a loss leader for Amazon they make so much money from the store.

I don't know how Netflix doesn't start raising their rates.
 
And Amazon Prime could probably be a loss leader for Amazon they make so much money from the store.

Amazon makes most of it's money from AWS these days, and they are usually operating at a loss overall as a company (but only because of profit re-investment)
 
Doesn't Netflix have something like $12 billion in debt or something insane like that?
Netflix has been the victim of some deliberately, twisted/shoddy news coverage from the media/entertainment/business industry press. Netflix' many rivals have forwarded this false narrative to manufacture the impression that NF is being fiscally irresponsible and "the bubble will burst/the sky is falling". And the media laps it up and regurgitates it without a care.

In short, Netflix' rivals have lumped the company's (yearly) debt obligations into one titanic sum in order to claim that they're gonna go down in a blaze. The payments on the bonds they've taken out won't actually be due for several years-and it won't be the entire $12 billion at once. Installment payments is how they'll pay it off. And they make more than enough money to do that.

Bob Iger didn't sit at his desk and write a check for $73 billion to Rupert Murdoch, who took it and cashed it and then went out and bought a bucket of hot wings. The financial institution handling the sale of 20th Century Fox' assets is being paid in installments...Because Disney doesn't have $73 billion to shell out in one single payment. Same with ATT not having $85 billion sitting around in the bank to buy Time Warner.

None of the press has screeched about these 2 companies piling up insane debt levels as they have with Netflix, because there is no motive to portray them as being reckless and irresponsible.
Netflix however, must be excoriated for doing the exact same thing many other companies have done for decades. Because they're Netflix. And Netflix is bad.
 
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