Here's how big a fan I am. I paid $90 for a VHS copy of Star Trek V the day it was released. When I bought the tape I saw in the video store clerks eyes a mix of shock and pity.Severely overpriced VHS tapes continued well into the 90's. I remember going to summer camp the week that Generations was released on video. I left $20 with my mom so that she could purchase it and it would be waiting for me when I returned home. When my mom went to purchase the movie, she was told that the MSRP was $89.95 and that it wouldn't come down for a few months. I'm assuming that this was to help drive the rental market. Did anyone else run into this situation?
I taped every TNG and DS9, both from the very beginning. I still have them, boxed up along with my complete set of Mystery Science Theater 3000 episodes.So did anyone record any Trek and keep it on VHS during the TNG, DS9, and Voyager years; I think by Enterprise people were expecting the DVD release, but in the 90's those newer Trek shows were a little inconsistent in their release to VHS. I remember recording the first two seasons of DS9 religiously until they started screwing with the time slot for the show and it got harder to keep track of when it would be on with a new episode. Ahh, those were the days.
So did anyone record any Trek and keep it on VHS during the TNG, DS9, and Voyager years; I think by Enterprise people were expecting the DVD release, but in the 90's those newer Trek shows were a little inconsistent in their release to VHS. I remember recording the first two seasons of DS9 religiously until they started screwing with the time slot for the show and it got harder to keep track of when it would be on with a new episode. Ahh, those were the days.
So did anyone record any Trek and keep it on VHS during the TNG, DS9, and Voyager years; I think by Enterprise people were expecting the DVD release, but in the 90's those newer Trek shows were a little inconsistent in their release to VHS. I remember recording the first two seasons of DS9 religiously until they started screwing with the time slot for the show and it got harder to keep track of when it would be on with a new episode. Ahh, those were the days.
I remember them making a big deal out of the VHS edition for Star Trek IV as a sell-through in the summer/fall of 1987 at the "low low" price of $19.95.
Man...talk about your trips down Memory Lane....
That, but also to line Paramount's pockets. They knew hordes of Trekkers would pay any amount of money to get those tapes right away and they took advantage of that. The hardcore Trekker might grumble, but he'd buy it anyway. It's just hard to imagine no one at Paramount was even a little red-faced at the $99.99 price tag on "The Final Frontier."Severely overpriced VHS tapes continued well into the 90's. I remember going to summer camp the week that Generations was released on video. I left $20 with my mom so that she could purchase it and it would be waiting for me when I returned home. When my mom went to purchase the movie, she was told that the MSRP was $89.95 and that it wouldn't come down for a few months. I'm assuming that this was to help drive the rental market. Did anyone else run into this situation?
VCRs themselves were still in the $300 range throughout the 90s. It took DVD player prices plummeting down to almost nothing to cause the same thing to happen with VCRs (which, in turn, happened I think because PS2 forced competition by including a DVD player of its own).^ Yep. That was still a common practice at least into the mid-90s. By then, though, I was buying LaserDiscs.
That, but also to line Paramount's pockets. They knew hordes of Trekkers would pay any amount of money to get those tapes right away and they took advantage of that. The hardcore Trekker might grumble, but he'd buy it anyway. It's just hard to imagine no one at Paramount was even a little red-faced at the $99.99 price tag on "The Final Frontier."
What you say is true for normal movie fans. But we're talking about Trekkers, a group of people who, whether they like a Trek movie or not still have to own it. You can be sure that the majority of people on this board who say they hate TFF still own the movie. I'm willing to bet many obsessive fans shelled out that much money because they couldn't wait to own it. I know fans who did -- who didn't necessarily even like the movie.Actually, I don't think they expected anyone to really buy the movie at $90, that's why they did it. It became pretty standard across the industry to release videos "priced for rental." If the price is too high, more people will rent it. When you have a movie tank at the box office, the prospect of high profits from people buying the tape at $20, is pretty slim. Yet more people will take a chance on a movie on "movie night" for $5 or less, especially when they have a few movies coming home.
Gone into a Blockbuster lately? Since getting a blu-ray player I've started going again, and the change since back in the day is pretty amazing. Remember back when going to the video rental store on the weekend was almost like going to the cinema on the weekend as crowded as it was. You were guaranteed to stand in line forever, you had to get there early or your movie wouldn't be there. Now you go even on the weekend and there may be two or three others there. If they aren't playing a movie on their monitors it's as quiet as a library. It's no wonder they've closed so many stores in the last year. How the mighty have fallen.Once the rentals brought in their maximum money, they'd lower the price for people to buy. Remember, back then the rental market was HUGE and a driving force in the video industry. It used to annoy me that most video stores did not sell movies, only rented.
What you say is true for normal movie fans. But we're talking about Trekkers, a group of people who, whether they like a Trek movie or not still have to own it. You can be sure that the majority of people on this board who say they hate TFF still own the movie. I'm willing to bet many obsessive fans shelled out that much money because they couldn't wait to own it. I know fans who did -- who didn't necessarily even like the movie.
Gone into a Blockbuster lately? Since getting a blu-ray player I've started going again, and the change since back in the day is pretty amazing. Remember back when going to the video rental store on the weekend was almost like going to the cinema on the weekend as crowded as it was. You were guaranteed to stand in line forever, you had to get there early or your movie wouldn't be there. Now you go even on the weekend and there may be two or three others there. If they aren't playing a movie on their monitors it's as quiet as a library. It's no wonder they've closed so many stores in the last year. How the mighty have fallen.
.There was also a set of 5 VHS tapes that came out in the very early 80's, which were black covers with photos on them of the episodes on each tape. It had:
-The Menagerie, Parts I and II
-Amok Time and Journey To Babel
-The Trouble With Tribbles and Let That Be Your Last Battlefield
-Mirror, Mirror and The Tholian Web
-Balance of Terror and City On The Edge Of Forever
I still have them, and play them once in a while for nostalgia. IIRC, my parents got them for me as a Christmas present and they were $49.95 or $39.95 per tape.
There was also a set of 5 VHS tapes that came out in the very early 80's, which were black covers with photos on them of the episodes on each tape. It had:
-The Menagerie, Parts I and II
-Amok Time and Journey To Babel
-The Trouble With Tribbles and Let That Be Your Last Battlefield
-Mirror, Mirror and The Tholian Web
-Balance of Terror and City On The Edge Of Forever
I still have them, and play them once in a while for nostalgia. IIRC, my parents got them for me as a Christmas present and they were $49.95 or $39.95 per tape.
Sigh...the money I wasted on Star Trek VHS.
They all took up so much room and I had replaced them all with DVDs.
A lot of stuff was more expensive in the '80s, anyway. Anyone remember how expensive Pizza was? Even for crappy pizza, the prices were outrageous. By today's prices, that would be like, 45 bucks for a large pepperoni from Pizza Hut. Add five bucks for each additional topping.And that's not including inflation - a $99 VHS tape in 1987 = $187 in 2008 dollars.Even the full retail price per season on DVD is like a third what they amounted to back when VHS was around. I imagine it was worse in the US with in some cases, just a single episode on each cassette.![]()
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.