Author
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Topic: Why were films so expensive in the mass market days?
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Adrian Winchester
Film God
Posts: 2941
From: Croydon, London, UK
Registered: Aug 2004
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posted January 09, 2013 08:08 PM
In the 'Captain America' thread, a member made the interesting point that although it seemed an expensive release, the price is about the same as what was charged, taking inflation into account, in the mass market days of the late 1970s. Of course nowadays, far higher prices than what we became used to in the 1980s and 90s are understandable, but I wonder why prices were so high in an era were distributors were ordering and selling in bulk and there was competition between distributors and labs which might have helped to keep prices down. Did film collecting have to be such an expensive hobby in those days, due to factors such as the price of fim stock, or were distributors taking advantage of customers?
-------------------- Adrian Winchester
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Hugh Thompson Scott
Film God
Posts: 3063
From: Gt. Clifton,Cumbria,England
Registered: Jan 2012
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posted January 09, 2013 08:56 PM
I think Adrian,that when S/8 was at it's height,just before video took off,the companies were rather pushihg it with their recommended retail prices and what they were actually being sold for.A friend of mine at the time had bought "Where Eagles Dare" from Walton Films and actually paid £42.00 per part, he was hoping to sell it to me for £100.00 and was not too happy when told that the same film could be obtained for about £50.00 from Lees Cameras.So I do think that some of the firms were being cheeky.I found that the German prints were very expensive, but the Italian films were very reasonable,horses for courses,you paid your money and took your choice. Derann I feel were a very competitive company and did try to give value for money, not on trade ins, as a lot of folks I have spoken to at Blackpool echoed.They did understand business though and won points on breaking up the cost of a film over a set period in instalments when the cost of a film was a few hundred pounds.Now, I don't think I could justify paying these high sums for new film releases, it would have to be a film I really wanted, or wait for a 16mm copy.
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Manuel Tapia
Film Handler
Posts: 47
From: Monterrey, mexico
Registered: Aug 2012
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posted January 09, 2013 11:03 PM
Even the cost of the film, if you sell DVD at 10 USD and you have a gain of 2 USD per movie, if you sell 1000 movie per month, you will gain 2000 USD per month, but if you sell FILM how many film do you will sell per month ? 50? , 100? to gain the same money per month if you sell 100, per film you need to gain 20 USD, add the cost of the produce a film (Chemicals,Negative, film, etc.) plus it is a hobby of antiques and day by day more project die, film lose in atics, basement or trash.
I'm not just collect 8mm, i'm a fan of any type of movies Laserdisc, HD DVD, VHS, DVD, Blurays. i think the most expensive are the Super 8 then Laserdisc then VHS at last DVD, HD DVD today is very cheap because is not vintage yet is just old and discontinued.
My 2 Cents !!
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