I am the Doctor wrote:2099net wrote:I've just read Luke's review, so I think I'll respond primarily to that rather than issues in this thread:
Firstly, the fact that Disney has only sent out Blu-ray screeners of Pinocchio is just as likely to be because the release comes with a DVD (so people reviewers can comment on the DVD quality) and all the extras from the 2 disc DVD are on the  Blu-ray release too (so reviewers can comment on the content of the DVD extras) while at the same time review the Blu-ray picture and exclusive supplements. I know this may sound like a jab at Luke, but its not unreasonable for Disney to expect reviewers to have a blu-ray player at this time. UD has reviewers with Blu-rays - Aaron for example could have done a DVD and Blu-ray review of Pinocchio no problem.
I didn't respond to this earlier, but I, for one, am frankly glad that Luke refused to do something like this.  Luke's intention was to review the two-disc DVD.  To me, that's about maintaining one's credibility as a reviewer and an unwillingness to take shortcuts (aka, viewing the supplements on the Blu version, and basing one's review on that.  
For example, what if the situation was reversed, and Disney had sent out the two disc DVD to reviewers, with the movie disc of the Blu-Ray.  According to the same logic one could do a review of the Blu-Ray disc as well.  After all, the contents of the supplement disc are exactly the same, so what difference does it make that you were sent the DVD version, as opposed to the Blu version?   
Another great example, I own the Sony 350 Blu-Ray player.  Therefore, I'm fully qualified to review the Panasonic BD-35 Blu-Ray player.  They do the same thing (play Blu-Ray discs, along with DVDs), why bother using the actual product?
I'm sure many reviewers will take the short-cut that you mention when writing their reviews of Pinocchio.  As such, I would have to consider such reviews to be dishonest, as they didn't actually use the product they were reviewing.  I have to admire Luke's choice not to take a short-cut with his review of the two disc DVD of Pinocchio, or to allow someone else as you suggested to do so. 
Regardless of where one stands on the whole Blu vs. DVD debate, the one thing that stands out is Luke's credibility as a reviewer.  Even as a Blu-Ray supporter, I have to applaud Luke's decision.
 
Well, even on Luke's exhaustive reviews, I can't recall an instance where the audio/visual quality of any supplements is actually mentioned, beyond remarks about crude quality from work prints etc, which would be visible on the Blu-ray supplements. For example, when reviewing "all new Music Videos" with Disney channel stars, he's never as much as remarked if its in a 2.0 mix or a 5.1 mix, nor has really given us information on the video quality of various "makings of" beyond perhaps remaking on older archive footage (which again the shortcomings would be apparent on the blu-ray supplement too).
If the 2 disc DVD came with a movie only Blu-ray disc then yes, people could do a Blu-ray review - they'd assess the quality of the film's presentation, which would be the bulk of the review, comment on the supplements and the extras' content - for all we know, all the Blu-ray exclusive extras could be on the first disc anyway - the most important (CineExplore) is anyway, and refer to no-doubt the press release to see which supplements were in HD and which were not - because when it comes down it to, that's all Blu-ray supplement reviews do - mark them as HD or non-HD, and sometimes give a run-time.
I've never seen anyone complain about an HD head-to-head interview supplement on HD as "looking soft" or "blacks are somewhat muted" etc. All that sort of criticism is saved for the feature presentation. Finally, the reviewer may decide to disclose the supplements were only viewed on the DVD release.
For crying out loud, lots of reviews do it with wording similar to "the blu-ray is the same, but features an additional commentary and a few more deleted scenes" etc.
Some companies (including Fox I believe) send out screener discs with watermarks and extra features totally missing, in plain envelopes. Yet these still get "reviewed" by almost every recipient, sometimes with the appropriate disclaimer, sometimes without. Many printed magazines in the UK say "not available at this time" in their reviews for this reason.
This site even reviewed a Fox DVDs which was not 100% representive of the retail release, they just put the appropriate disclaimer in the review to retain their integrity. Should these not have been reviewed?
http://www.dvdizzy.com/hortonhearsawho.html
http://www.dvdizzy.com/thehappening.html
I'm not saying Fox et al are being dishonest in doing this (we all know Fox are crazily paranoid about copying) but really Disney is providing a package many times more suitable for reviewing, even for just a DVD review, than these companies do. I don't see anything underhand in Disney's behaviour at all.
Of course, Luke's reviews are exhaustive - which is the main reason we like them so much. But Disney is not sending out screeners for UltimateDisney. They are sending out screeners for the newspapers, magazines and other on-line media reviewers who do only write at the most five or six paragraphs on the release, where often supplements are only listed as bullet points or briefly explained. It makes perfect sense for Disney to only send out the Blu-ray (which has the movie in DVD format too) to these. It also makes perfect sense for Disney to only send out 1 package across the board to all recipients and cut down on management and administration time. I don't know if you noticed, but most companies are actively seeking to minimise costs due to the economic climate.
The point is Luke says its an attempt at desperation to talk up blu-ray, seeing a vast conspiracy, where as the only scheme I see is Disney PR simply saving money while still sending out all of the information 99%+ of reviewers would need to write their reviews (and still have integrity) - be they single paragraph summaries or half-page articles on a printed page. I think some people are looking for patterns that don't exist.