The DVD Revolution: Movies, Culture, and TechnologyBloomsbury Academic, 2005 - 179 páginas The introduction of the DVD marked the beginning of one of history's most successful technological innovations, and capped a 75-year development of home-viewing possibilities. Never before have film fans had access in their living rooms to something so remarkably close to the theatrical experience. In addition, because a DVD can hold much more than a single movie, it has allowed films to be marketed with a variety of extras, sparking both a new packaging industry and greater interest on the part of home viewers. This book provides an examination of the DVD's impact, both on home viewing and on film study. From film fan culture through filmmaker commentaries, from special editions to a look at where the format will go from here, author Aaron Barlow offers the first-ever exploration of this explosive new entertainment phenomenon. |
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... early 1930s , Kodak began experimenting with the smaller and cheaper 8mm format , which soon replaced 16mm as the prime home - viewing possibility , lasting in popularity well into the television era and only losing favor with the ...
... early years . The film industry started out feeling threatened by this technological innovation , only to embrace it as the money poured in — a pat- tern that would be repeated a number of times over the next half century as further ...
... early 1960s , with the advent of Saturday Night at the Movies on NBC , that films cracked prime time and fairly recent and successful Hollywood films reached television , though in edited and pan - and - scan forms that are anathema to ...
Contenido
CINÉMATHÈQUE FRANÇAISE AT OUR HOUSE | 29 |
THE SPECIAL EDITION DVD | 75 |
THE DVD AUDIO COMMENTARY | 109 |
Derechos de autor | |
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