
Do we have any advance reviews on this?
I'm dying to find out the region code

The studios can make more money on a blu-ray in Europe and such, where the prices are generally higher. That's why it's there. Of course, one main version for the entire world would be bad, because you'd have tons of dubs and subtitles. Also, some countries don't approve of violence and such.2099net wrote:Well, that just shows how f**ked up the whole region encoding thing is. Nobody has a clue as to how to use it, or what its for - and I'm including Disney in that list.
Films with simultaneous releases are region encoded (such as the Platinums) or films were global rollouts are within a small release window (such as A Nightmare Before Xmas) are region locked, while films like A Bug's Life, which is totally absent from European listings are region free? For all I know, it could be months before we see a release (the fact Amazon and others list Monsters, Inc and Finding Nemo, yet no A Bug's Life makes it even more crazy and illogical).
I don't know why Studios insist on region locking anything - they saw it was rejected by the populations of every single country outside of North America, and yet they still insisted of having some form of locking on Blu-ray (a system which is even less logical than the DVD system by the way - do you really think you can split up the whole of the world, and it's complicated licencing and release windows into just three regions?)
Movietyme also confirmed it, and they check every title on their site personally. So, if they say a title's region free, it is.PatrickvD wrote:How reliable is that? Do we know for sure it's region free?
What have Disney's BD releases so far been, locked, right?
Region locking pisses me off so badly.