A major movie studio will begin an experiment next week making feature films available for downloading over the Internet.
Published:
20 January 2001 y., Saturday
On Monday, Miramax will allow its 1999 release "Guinevere," starring Sarah Polley and Stephen Rea, to be downloaded for $3.49. It will take about 30 minutes to move over a high-speed Internet connection. The digital version of "Guinevere" will play on home computers full-screen in near-DVD quality.
But there's a catch: The downloaded movie expires in 24 hours, and cannot be played on your computer after that. If you e-mail a copy to a friend or transfer it to another device, it will not play at all.
Studios are struggling to develop an Internet movie strategy, hoping to have workable alternatives available before a Napster-like Web site makes swapping pirated films as easy as downloading the latest Britney Spears ballad. Their earlier experiments with producing original short films and animation for the Internet failed, leaving studios wondering how to use Net technology while protecting their copyrights.
"Guinevere" will be available for download at www.miramax.com, www.sightsound.com and www.guineverethemovie.com.
Miramax, a division of the Walt Disney Co., signed a deal in April with SightSound.com to offer 12 feature films on the Web. The arrangement is an experiment in consumers' willingness to watch downloaded films on a pay-per-view basis.
Other studios have been exploring a video-on-demand strategy, making movies available over high-speed cable television lines or over private networks.
Šaltinis:
nydailynews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A growing number of websites are going back to the future. The new horizon: old-fashioned print
more »
Why the Beatles greatest hits album is topping the charts.
more »
Despite the expectations of publishers, a report by Forrester Research forecasts slow growth for both eBooks and eBook reading devices.
more »
The director and the basketball legend are among celebrities whose stars will be added next year to the more than 2,000 that line Hollywood Boulevard, it was announced Sunday.
more »
"AntiTrust," a new motion picture from MGM scheduled to hit theaters Jan. 12, 2001, explores the headlong, and often cutthroat race for supremacy in the world of digital convergence
more »
Madonna has finally tied the knot with her fiance Guy Ritchie
more »
Dublin's National Library paid $1.5 million for a signed, handwritten manuscript of the longest chapter of James Joyce's ``Ulysses.''
more »
Using the Internet as an artistic medium for filmmakers, the Sundance Institute unveiled Friday the lineup for its first Sundance Online Film Festival.
more »
Net-based firms use veteran actors to capitalize on the past
more »
Horror writer Stephen King is taking a break from his online serial novel, The Plant, so he can focus on other, perhaps more lucrative, projects.
more »