Movie studio executives on Friday presented the best-case scenario for a winter holiday surge in the purchase of high-definition Blu-ray players as their best hope to keep the U.S. home video market's decline from accelerating past 3 percent or 4 percent this year.
The executives hosted by The Digital Entertainment Group, a consortium of movie studios and electronics manufacturers, forecast that 10.5 million households would be able to play Blu-ray videos by the end of the year — with about 2.5 million standalone players and 8 million PlayStation 3 game consoles.
That estimate is much lower than the 14.4 million households that Adams Media Research said in June would be playing Blu-rays by the end of the year. But if it is to come true, about 1 million more standalone players and 2.3 million more PS3s must be sold through the holidays.
Prices have dropped in recent months, and Blu-ray players can be found online for less than $200, encouraging hope for adoption of the format.
"The only dark cloud is the economy," David Bishop, president of Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, told a panel. He said the consumer products side of Sony Corp. is "showing no slowdown in the adoption of the PlayStation 3."
There are 5.7 million PS3s installed in the United States now, and Sony and expects to sell 4 million to 5 million more by March.
"We remain pretty confident that we'll meet our targets for the fiscal year," said Julie Han, spokeswoman for Sony Computer Entertainment America.
These so-called "early adopters" of video technology are especially important because they tend to buy more movies than consumers who join a trend later.
"These are the heavy buyers, the heavy collectors," said Craig Kornblau, president of Universal Studios Home Entertainment.
Executives agreed it is still the early days of Blu-ray because it was only February when the high-definition format beat out Toshiba Corp.-backed HD DVD. Last week, the consortium kicked off a $25 million TV ad campaign to push Blu-ray, acknowledging in part that half the people it polled in a recent survey didn't know the format war was over.
Gains in Blu-ray revenues, including rentals and sales, are expected to counter some of the expected 6 percent decline in regular DVD revenue in the U.S. in calendar 2008.
Through the first three-quarters of the year, video rental revenue in the U.S. was down 1.2 percent at $5.6 billion and sales were down 3.5 percent at $8.6 billion, according to the industry tracker, Video Business.
Economic headwinds remain a concern.
In a survey the consortium conducted in late August and early September of 2,200 owners of high-definition TV sets in the U.S., U.K. and Japan, just 12 percent said they were likely to buy Blu-ray players in the next six months.
Another 30 percent were open to purchasing them, it said. How potential Blu-ray consumers will respond to lower prices isn't clear.
"This was done before prices started to come down and before the economy started to hit," Chris Lang, senior vice president of research firm SmithGeiger LLC, told the panel.
Those who don't yet have high-definition sets are not expected to be large contributors this season, said Bob Chapek, president of Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment Worldwide. Purchasing a $1,000 high-definition TV and even a moderately priced Blu-ray player may not appeal to some buyers in the slowing economy, he said.
"It's only logical to expect there'd be some economic impact," he said. But he added, "We've been pleasantly surprised so far."
The consortium said a growing proportion — now about 10 percent — of home video sales comes from Blu-ray. In October, as the U.S. financial crisis came into focus, sales of Blu-ray discs more than quadrupled to 2.2 million units, it said.
A number of upcoming titles are riding on the format, including Warner Bros.' "The Dark Knight" due out in December.
Previous top-selling titles, such as "Iron Man," "The Incredible Hulk" and "Hellboy II: The Golden Army" have had a strong appeal among PS3 owners, and that raises hopes for a December turnaround.
"Every week as the next title comes out, we're all holding our breath," Kornblau said.
I don't foresee Blu-ray going anywhere. They waited far too long to drop the prices and the price of converting your movie collection to Blu-ray is too high. I expect DVD players with video upconversion to take off in the next year or so.
they play DVD disks you know. And most blue-ray players have some of the best up scaling in the industry.
I agree though, BR is going no where.
Not. Gonna. Happen.
Netflix "Watch Instantly", Hulu and the iTunes Store have decided it for me. In the American marketplace
convenience and price trump quality every time. You would have thought that someone in the entertainment industry would have figured that out by now.
Best hope for Blu-Ray? Sell the movies for $9.99 and the player for $75. That's the mass-market price tipping point. After all, at what point did DVD players become ubiquitous? When they were $75 and the DVDs for $9.99.
I dont see the blue ray doing any better unless they slash their prices abit more. Especially considering the current state of the economy with hundreds of thousands of people who've either lost their jobs and/or their homes. And for those who still do work, may be hesitant to shell out 30+ for blueray movies when the plain ol dvd sells for half of that or less. If the Blueray really wants to overcome this, they may have to bite the bullet and slash prices on their movies and take abit of a loss now, rather than watch their losses increase further as their sales go stagnant.
I doubt they'll take that suggestion though ^^;
Nope!
Blu-Ray players need to drop in price.
Blu-Ray discs need to drop a great deal in price.
The quality price/performance cost, just doesn't make it worth the cost today.
Blu-ray hasn't and won't capture the public imagination. The improvement in quality is modest and the hassle factor is great. It took too long to win the war with HD-DVD and Sony made the mistake of thinking that would clear the path to cashing in on the win so they kept prices high. The public have given up on HD movie disks as an embarrassing fiasco.
That's 2 big mistakes from Sony, including fighting the format war in the first place. Oh, and blowing megabucks to win the format war. Does that make it 3 big mistakes?
This is starting to sound like a Python sketch. Noooooobody expects the .....
With the current pseudo-recession, I'd say Blu-ray is all but dead unless Sony is willing to pour money into it for five more years without expectation of net profit.
The marginal improvement from VHS to DVD was spectacular: zero-degradation, random-access, extra-feature-laden, surround-sound-infused, high-res movies.
From DVD to Blu-ray? Better extra features, a visual quality bump that not many people can take advantage of, and an audio quality bump that virtually no one can take advantage of, or even discern.
Far less compelling.
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