John
I can't think of a better example
kudos
Rich==========


At 03:53 PM 11/30/2008, Linda Noradki wrote:
Hello All,

I have been reading with interest the discussion about movie posters in the
digital age...

I hate to agree that the era of paper posters is almost at an end. Digital
Posters are all ready available online for downloading. It is just a matter
of time before the theatres have the displays to show them in the lobby..

Here is an example of what a digital Poster will look like... From a
"Terminator - Salvation" coming out next May 2009.

http://www.wonderfulworldofmovies.com/Terminator_Trailer/  Enjoy...

Sincerely,

John Dingle
WonderfulWorldOfMovies.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Richard Halegua Comic Art [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, November 30, 2008 4:50 PM
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Could this replace collecting actual movie posters?


I've been saying for the past 3-4 years.. maybe longer .. that
digital displays are the direction theatres will be headed

first of all, printing, shipping and storing posters are an expense
that studio owners would love to eliminate. Not to mention the
employees needed for such a distribution network.

these employees need to inventory, request out of stock posters from
other warehouses, have to take those rolls of 50 and pull 1-5 posters
to send out to individual theaters etc.

shipping by truck after printing and then individually  to theaters
is a greater expense than printing them

also, if a poster has a mistake, it has to be reprinted etc.

a digital display can be controlled by one central location by the
studio - out of the hands of theatre owners - to maintain a
consistent promotion from the theatres in Westwood to those in
Montauk and all the way to Japan, India and Australia with great
ease. A simple program can be set up to change the language fonts

When the studio wants to change the campaign, all they have to do is
create it in the central computer & feed it - simultaneously all over the
world

But then you go further. Digital displays can show trailers
intermingled with posters and can draw people who were just walking
past the theatre better than a static poster. Plus you can "gang them
up" creating ever larger displays with multiple digital panels. How
about driving into a mall & seeing 20 digital panels fitted together
to create an 8 foot by 20 foot display showing trailers that can be
seen across the parking lot. Literally an outdoor cinema

The benefits of digital displays for theatres are endless. You have a
single upfront cost and then you never ship anything to the theatre
again and the same system that is used to feed the displays can also
be used to feed the film itself for digital theatres. another savings

where does the hobby go?
well, it would be hard to say that it doesn't drop some, and
certainly newer collectors would be less likely

Look at the comics hobby. Marvel & DC publish fewer comics today than
they did during the 1940s. As a matter of fact, if you total up all
the comic books published and distributed for any month of 2008, it
is fewer issues than a single issue of Captain Marvel sold during
WW2. (during WW2, Captain Marvel sold 2 million copies @ month.
Current publishing by all companies is less than 1.5 million @month.
Another comic, Walt Disney's Comics & Stories had a print run as high
as 4 million for years from the 40s-50s) As a result of fewer comic
book readers (due to social changes- less people reading anything),
the comic book hobby is decreasing in size and has been doing so for
about 15 years.

The result is not the elimination of these hobbies, but serious
compression is indeed in the future. At some point Marvel & DC will
cease paper publication as will all newspapers and magazine. The
likely future is a mini-disc for a "reader" that you take wherever
you go, in addition to just reading online of course. When this
happens, millions of comics will devalue in a short period of time (a
few years). Fewer collectors means more unsold titles and downsizing
to just the most popular material for hardcore collectors and
historians. Superman comics will always be collected at some level.
the 1940s title Mystery Men will be a tiny niche for historically
oriented collectors only. The same will be for posters.

Younger people will stop buying posters. THat generation will have
digital displays so they can change whatever they want to show

Posters for the obvious titles will always sell. A poster after all
is the same as an "art print". so Frankenstein, Casablanca, Snow
White will always sell. Getting Gerties Garter however, or My Side of
the Mountain.. well they are hardly requested anyway. So the hobby
will compress as our generations die off, much like that nearly
forgotten hobby - pulp magazines

Rich

         Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
   ___________________________________________________________________
              How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List

       Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
            In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L

    The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

         Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
   ___________________________________________________________________
              How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List

       Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
            In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L

    The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

        Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
  ___________________________________________________________________
             How to UNSUBSCRIBE from the MoPo Mailing List
Send a message addressed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
           In the BODY of your message type: SIGNOFF MOPO-L
The author of this message is solely responsible for its content.

Reply via email to