MattDean wrote: ↑Tue Feb 20, 2024 6:35 pmIf this is true, what do we think?
I honestly think this could be a good thing...
Sony has been great at releasing a variety of catalog films from different eras of the studio's history, although I personally am not fond of their six-film "Columbia Classics" box sets not getting individual releases (save for
Lawrence of Arabia and
Dr. Strangelove). The first volume now goes for thrice the original retail price, and the only films I want from it are
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington and
A League of Their Own.
Still, they've put more effort into digging deep into their catalog compared to Disney. The sheer fact that virtually any live-action catalog release was a barebones Disney Movie Club exclusive shows just how awful Disney treated their library. And the company has too many studios to oversee (Walt Disney Animation Studios, Walt Disney Pictures, Pixar Animation Studios, Marvel Studios, Lucasfilm, 20th Century Pictures, Searchlight Pictures), each one with their own sizable library of films that get summarily ignored.
My hope is that Sony will take some of what they're doing (like Anniversary reissues of titles that may be evergreen sellers, mid-level cult hits, or popular classics) and apply it to the Disney library. Perhaps even some box sets in the vein of their "Columbia Classics," just without the box-set-exclusivity or limited run. And, for goodness sake, include the DVD bonus features that were dropped from all those DMC exclusive discs or Walt Disney Signature Collection reissues.
Most of all, I want Sony to truly show some love to the 20th Century Fox library, as Disney has done very little with it since acquiring the studio. Before Disney, Fox was gracious with licencing its classics out to Twilight Time, Criterion Collection, and Kino Lorber. Now, discs that are just ten years old go for big bucks on the secondhand market because Disney has effectively put them out of print and won't reissue them under their distribution brand. Hopefully we'll get a Disney/Sony collaboration that will yield things like "The Rodgers & Hammerstein Collection" 4K Box Set or "The Best of Marilyn Monroe" 4K Box Set, or even just individual 4K releases of classics like
Laura or
Journey to the Center of the Earth or
The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Heck, I am selfish and want a 40th Anniversary 4K Ultra HD Steelbook for
Romancing the Stone to come out this year.
Alby