Nobody wanted to pay for FilmStruck, and it failed. Evidently, that didn’t work out, and the Collection moved to a WarnerMedia service called FilmStruck. For a short while, the entire Criterion Collection was available on Hulu. To see this in action, look at how the Criterion Collection is handling its transition to streaming.
Understandably, Netflix and Hulu aren’t willing to sign expensive contracts for films that will go unwatched, and movie studios aren’t willing to license their movies for cheap (they have to stay in business, after all).
But the audience for “artsy” films is narrow. To build up their libraries, streaming sites sign expensive contracts with movie studios and media corporations. This problem extends from the streaming business model, and it makes DVD and Blu-ray players an attractive prospect. Streaming services seldom offer rarer films or arthouse titles and, when they do, the fun doesn’t last long. Some Movies Aren’t Streamableįor film buffs and fans of international movies, the age of streaming is a curse. We’re not saying you should totally ditch streaming and commit your life to discs, but there’s no harm in going the extra mile for good video and audio-especially for your favorite flicks. If you’re obsessed with quality, though, you should pick up a Blu-ray player. This compression leaves behind undesirable digital artifacts, like banding and ghosting effects (which, to be fair, you might not even notice). Additionally, streaming platforms have to compress 4K video and audio to prevent lag and buffering.
But at this moment, most of the video on these websites is still in 1080p-four times smaller than 4K. Sure, services like Netflix and Amazon Video are making a slow crawl toward 4K. Believe it or not, that’s still higher quality than you’ll find on any streaming service. Blu-Ray, on the other hand, supports uncompressed 4K video, along with multichannel, uncompressed audio. The highest resolution achieved on DVD is only 480p-less than your average YouTube video. Blu-Ray Quality Is Still Better Than Streamingīy now, most people recognize DVD as a low-resolution format. Need an example? A new Blu-ray copy of Aliens is just $11, while a digital license (which might disappear one day) costs $15.
There are still a few outlets where you can purchase and download movies, but it’s often cheaper to buy the discs.
If you want to own movies and TV shows, you’re going to need a DVD or Blu-ray player. And, as we’ve seen from Ultraviolet’s failure, access to digital content can disappear at a moment’s notice. You either pay $12 a month to watch a select library of content that changes every month, or you shell out $15 for access to a specific movie on a particular website (to be fair, Movies Anywhere helps solve this issue). A Novel Concept: Owning What You Pay forĪs physical media slips into the abyss, we’re starting to run into an interesting problem. Lucky for you, there are still plenty of good reasons to buy a disc player.
But if you’re undecided, you might need some reasons why a disc player is worth your hard-earned cash. Well, if you want a DVD or Blu-Ray player, you might as well buy one. While we don’t think DVD and Blu-rays are outdated just yet, their future is inevitable. It’s a fact of life that media formats become obsolete.