Hollywood forces VidAngel to stop streaming its movies

The Hollywood Reporter is reporting that Warner Bros, Disney and Fox have won an injunction against “family values” streaming service VidAngel. In the aftermath, VidAngel has announced that it will “cease streaming all works for which it has not obtained licensing.” The company has also pledged to appeal, taking the fight all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary. VidAngel’s pitch is twofold: you can stream new movies for a dollar , with the added bonus of very specific censorship options. In its commercial, it suggests that you can watch The Wolf of Wall Street without the language or Game of Thrones without the nudity or violence. Which will save you a bucketload of time, since a sanitized version of each would last about four minutes. In order to make that happen, however, VidAngel purchased movies on DVD, uploaded them to its server and then “sold” a copy to its customers for $20. When the film had been seen, the company would then “buy back” the copy for $19, making the price for each rental a tidy buck. It sounds dodgy, but VidAngel felt that it was protected by the Family Movie Act (2005), which relaxed provisions of the DMCA for this sort of “family-friendly filtering.” The studios felt differently, and called VidAngel an unlicensed VOD streaming service that violated windowing regulations. For instance, you could watch an edited version of Star Wars: The Force Awakens days after it was available on DVD, even though it wasn’t yet due to appear on streaming services. Judge Andre Birotte Jr. sided with the studios, saying that the protections afforded by the Family Movie Act didn’t apply. Mostly because you need to work with an “authorized” copy of a studio movie, not just a DVD you picked up at the store. As a consequence, VidAngel has stopped offering its current catalog to users, but has pledged to keep fighting. It’s not shutting down in the interim, however, and will stream its first fully-licensed movie to customers at some point this week. Although there’s no guarantee that it won’t be something starring Kirk Cameron. Via: THR Source: Judgment (Documentcloud)

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Hollywood forces VidAngel to stop streaming its movies

Scan of original 1977 35mm print of Star Wars released online

A restored high-definition digital scan, taken from 35mm prints of the original, unmolested version of Star Wars, is now available online to those who are looking. May the celluloid will be with you. Always. While this isn’t the first time that attempts have been made to restore Star Wars to its original theatrical version—that’s the one without the much-maligned CGI effects and edits of later “special” editions—it is the first to have been based entirely on a single 35mm print of the film, rather than cut together from various sources. Here’s a post from the team who located prints and restored the film : Despite having access to the original source, and to all the cleaned footage as the project progressed, I was still completely blown away by the final version. I had no idea it could look so good! Honestly! Way back at the start I had created a comparison clip with the 2006 Bonus DVD on top and the raw scan of LPP on the bottom, in order to see which frames (if any) were missing from the print, and I remember being rather alarmed that it made the GOUT look good!: Creator George Lucas said, in disowning his original work, that all the copies of it were destroyed. “The only issue with Team Negative 1’s version of the film,” reports Mark Walton, “is that it isn’t exactly legal.” Here it is, compared to the official Blu-Ray: https://youtu.be/mo24gFFk7WM https://youtu.be/pFp9bSp-fro https://youtu.be/3Wjx01CuqDs

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Scan of original 1977 35mm print of Star Wars released online

‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ overtakes ‘Avatar’ as highest-grossing film in US history

“Star Wars: The Force Awakens” just pushed James Cameron’s “Avatar” aside as the top-grossing film in North America. In just 20 days of release, the seventh installment in the space opera saga has earned more than “Avatar’s” $760.5 million lifetime gross. From Variety : One important caveat is that this massive haul does not account for inflation. When pricing increases are factored in, “Gone With the Wind” remains the highest-grossing film in history with $1.7 billion and the first “Star Wars” is runner-up with $1.5 billion. “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” is in 21st place behind classics such as “The Sound of Music,” “E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial” and “Titanic.” Globally, “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” ranks as the fourth highest-grossing pic in history, having earned $1.5 billion worldwide. It opens this weekend in China, the world’s second-biggest market for film. Depending on how enthusiastically it is received in the People’s Republic, “The Force Awakens” could shoot past “Avatar’s” record $2.8 billion global haul.

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‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’ overtakes ‘Avatar’ as highest-grossing film in US history

11 movies that made less than $400 at the U.S. box office

How is it possible that a movie with the catchy title of Zyzzyx Road , staring Tom Sizemore and Katherine Heigl, could only gross $30 at the box office? Read the rest

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11 movies that made less than $400 at the U.S. box office