Fox to sell low-cost DVDs in China to combat piracy
11/13/2006 10:57:37 AM, by Jacqui Cheng
Twentieth Century Fox plans to be the second movie studio to start selling cheap DVDs in an attempt to beat piracy to the punch in China. Piracy in China, which has a long and sordid history, is costing movie studios an estimated $244 million a year in lost DVD and ticket sales, according to the MPAA.
The first studio to announce such a strategy was Time Warner, which said in August that it planned to start releasing cheap DVDs in China in an attempt to fight piracy. The movies were to be released on DVD soon after their theatrical release for about 10 yuan (approximately $1.25) apiece. 10 yuan is close to the typical price for a pirated movie in China. Time Warner hoped that the move would lure customers to buy their DVDs instead of illegal alternatives. The short amount of time between theatrical and DVD release in China was also meant to try to beat pirates in getting the DVDs out as quickly as possible.
Fox's strategy mirrors Time Warner's, but they plan to offer DVDs at a slightly higher price of 20 to 25 yuan (about $3 per disc). This is, of course, about twice as much as the average street price of a pirated DVD in China, but Fox hopes that the premium isn't so much that it deters customers from buying their discs. Fox's international home-entertainment manager Keith Feldman told the Wall Street Journal that "it comes down to our ability as marketers to convince the Chinese consumer it's worth spending the money."
In addition to offering low-priced DVDs, Fox also plans on aggressively improving its marketing and distribution in China. Feldman said that while the Chinese consumer is eager to buy foreign films, it's often difficult to even find legal copies of them. Guo Zilong, president of Fox's new distribution partner Zoke Culture Group, said that Zoke's nationwide network of agents should help movie studios such as Fox improve their retail presence in China.
Studios such as Time Warner and Fox have come to the realization that if they don't make such low-priced offerings to the people of China, they won't make any sales at all. Charging $1.25 to $3.00 per disc and selling a few thousand movies is certainly better than (nearly) nothing, which is what they were making before. Plus, it gives them a chance to get legal copies of movies into Chinese homes and be able to legitimately bolster their sales numbers—an important strategy in an age where DVD sales in the US are beginning to plateau.
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Here's the question: How do they legally justify damages of $150000 per downloaded movie when they are selling them for $3?
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:56 pm Posts: 19957 Location: Jenny Lewis' funbags
petemd wrote:
Heck. I can cross the border and pick them up in Shenzhen for 50 cents. Of course I never would. They have to go lower I guess.
Ha, my aunt and uncle are living in Shenzhen and bring us home stacks of cheapo DVDs whenever come visit. That's how i got all my copies of the X-files seasons
Joined: Thu Apr 14, 2005 3:13 am Posts: 4932 Location: SEX MAKES BABIES?!
So basically they're rewarding piracy.
It's strange that any whisper of democracy or sniff of drugs and you're in the execution lineup. But they can't curb piracy?
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So basically they're rewarding piracy. It's strange that any whisper of democracy or sniff of drugs and you're in the execution lineup. But they can't curb piracy?
It's piracy of imported goods they don't care about. Domestically produced goods are protected by authorities. There are lots of ways to fight a war.
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