None of the fine people in this thread of course but some of the reprobates I've known over the years.

Yes, there certainly are some moral high horses being paraded hereabouts.
None of the fine people in this thread of course but some of the reprobates I've known over the years.
My point, dumb and futile as it was, it that it is as morally wrong and technically illegal to watch it on anything other than your own personal copy videotaped at the time. Moreso even since the creator of Star Wars personally objected to releasing copies to the public. But yes you are correct it is technically different from the other examples.
not what anybody here is saying
My point, dumb and futile as it was, it that it is as morally wrong and technically illegal to watch it on anything other than your own personal copy videotaped at the time.
As curious as I was about the Bargirl movie, and saddened that it got axed, I really have no desire to see a leaked copy of what's out there now. It's basically a incomplete movie, with a partial score that was in the works, a lot of effects not done. I assume that the re-recording and editing of the dialogue (what's that word for it again) isn't that done so a lot of it will be hard to follow because of all the noise on set.
Further, the Snyder Cut was the originally intended culmination (part one of it) of the DCEU Snyder established across several films.
Batgirl has no such weight behind it, as its a single, branching off story from the Flash movie, and there are some advocating the theft and distribution of footage all due to whatever they--alone--have told themselves about the merits of a film they know nothing about.
Oh, that's such a weasel way of getting out of having to proof your accusations. You may find one or two posts expressing the hope the movie would be leaked, but I seriously doubt you'll find someone aware that this would get the leaker into serious trouble doing so.I beg to differ. There are definitely posts from earlier in this thread that either openly advocate for people to break NDAs and leak the Batgirl footage or else are worded in such a way that their intent is clear without being overt.
Thanks for the recommendation. I'm good though. This clearly means more to people than it means to me.I recommend the documentary "Doomed!: The Untold Story of Roger Corman's The Fantastic Four". It shows how the cast and crew really emotionally and career-wise suffered from the movie not being released, and how glad they were when it was leaked and found its cult following.
Has anyone here ever seen:
The Star Wars Holiday Special?
That seems like an overstatement to me. I mean, sure, it'd be illegal to broadcast such a tape publicly or sell copies of it for profit, since those would compete with the rightful owners' business. But what if you're just having some friends over for a watch party, or loaning it to a classmate? People shared videotapes with their friends and family all the time.
There was public concern that VHS and copying albums on cassette was going to destroy the entertainment industry. It was consider to be illegal to copy and distribute. There really was no way to enforce that though.
And hey, look at the animated reconstructions of erased Doctor Who episodes that have come out on video in recent years. Those were based on audio recordings that viewers made directly off their televisions when the episodes aired -- technically illegal to distribute, but the BBC worked with their owners to obtain and restore them and use them as the basis for the animations. So it wasn't treated as some sleazy crime, but as a valuable act of film preservation.
I beg to differ. There are definitely posts from earlier in this thread that either openly advocate for people to break NDAs and leak the Batgirl footage or else are worded in such a way that their intent is clear without being overt.
If there is no legal way to get something (and overpriced OOP second hand stuff doesn't count, because the owners/creators don't see money from that anyway), then I see nothing morally wrong with experiencing projects how you can, this goes for all kinds of media.
1. You betray your own double standart here. It isn't really about letting the world see a director's artistic vision. You just wanted to see the Snyder Cut, while you for some reason don't want anybody to see Batgirl. If you were consistent, you'd recognize that both cases are about filmmakers having their work made available to an audience.
You refer to others telling themselves "whatever" about the merits of a film they know nothing about. Yet here you are, making your own judgment on a film you know no more than those you lament about.
Yes, there's a wealth of evidence for WB production employees to break the law, and posts similar to:
If there is no legal way to get something (and overpriced OOP second hand stuff doesn't count, because the owners/creators don't see money from that anyway), then I see nothing morally wrong with experiencing projects how you can, this goes for all kinds of media.
Wrong again. Not once did I (or any) advocate a release of what would become the Snyder Cut by any illegal means, and sorry, but a grassroots campaign supporting Snyder to be allowed to complete the real version of Justice League is in no way similar to the Batgirl issue, where individuals are openly calling for WB production employees to violate the law by distributing IPs they do not own.
We have jack shit. We have some early rumors about the movie being deemed unwatchable, we have a test screening score that's about as high as other DC films that are being released, and we have assurances from studio officials that the cancellation was not a judgement on the quality of the film. That's all contradictory information, meaning we know nothing.We have more, legitimate information about perceptions of Batgirl's quality from WB than anything from the advocates of theft (i.e., those acting as if the film was going to be some astounding revelation based on no information at all), so those not feeling any particular loss from the shelving of Batgirl are basing that on what its known (so far) from official sources.
Come on, read that again, and then think long and hard whether words to the effect of "Yo, WB employee, go and risk your career and financial future so I can watch this movie". Because it's not there. All that @kirk55555 expressed there was a moral argument on the side of the consumer, not the person making the product available. And an expression of personal morality is not the same as a call for illegal actions.
Let's leave the hypothetical of what you'd have done had the Snyder Cut been never released legally
We have jack shit. We have some early rumors about the movie being deemed unwatchable, we have a test screening score that's about as high as other DC films that are being released
There was something special about reliving a show just by the audio that was a distinct experience in itself. We could get one of the TV stations audio on the bottom of the FM dial and could get some ridiculously clear and high fidelity recordings for the time.I saw it when it originally aired. In Fact I recorded the audio on 8-track and listened to it many times after that.
But, apparently a leak is worth the risk to some. Don't expect me to agree.
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