The founder of Blue Ray Technologies, an independent US Blu-ray factory, has
hit out at the industry over the reported
$150m in
incentives given to
Paramount
and
DreamWorks
Animation to shun the format.
Earlier this week it emerged that Paramount is to be paid by Toshiba and the
other HD-DVD proponents for producing content exclusively for the HD-DVD format.
"Toshiba
and HD-DVD offered this deal because they are desperate. The public has chosen
Blu-ray discs with their pocket books, buying them 2-to-1 over HD-DVDs this
year," said Blue Ray Technologies founder Erick Hansen.
"For retailers, it's like being forced to stock VHS tapes after the public
chose DVDs. For the consumer it creates more confusion that hurts the
industry-wide move to high-definition."
Hanson noted that DVD retail leaders
Blockbuster
and Target
will only stock Blu-ray on their shelves.
"What has Paramount gained by accepting the money?" asked Hansen, suggesting
that if multi-billion dollar directors like Steven Spielberg and Michael Bay
support Blu-ray, the deal is a double-edged sword.
Spielberg's films are specifically excluded from the Paramount-DreamWorks
Animation deal and will continue to be released in both formats, according to
Paramount.
Whereas Bay recently released a statement on his website publicising his
displeasure at the distribution of Transformers I and II on
HD-DVD only.
"It is not that I am surprised they took the deal," Hansen said. "But it is
like paying them not to grow crops. How is the film industry going to segue into
the next-gen world if it accepts a relative pittance to stunt its growth?"
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