Its all about Money |
The Studios' scheme to get movie exhibitors to convert to digital cinema by paying a virtual print fee (a fee given to the exhibitor because a film print did not need to be distributed) which defrays the cost for the D-Cinema conversion, comes with lots of stipulations and, in fact, is advantageous to - you guessed it - the Studios
For example, to qualify for the VPF, movie exhibitors must, among other requirements:
- Open digital movies on the first day of their release. That is why you will
see first run movies opening in smaller auditoriums with small screens.
The movie must open but there are other films already in the large auds.
which can not, under contract, be moved to the smaller auds.
- Any renovation made to a cinema from 1/1/10-to-present that did not
include a digital cinema platform can not qualify for the VPF. Code:
those cinemas that are thinking of upgrading, for whatever reason, must
include a D-Cinema conversion into their plans.
- Once a d-cinema platform is installed the exhibitor has 6 months to
upgrade all other auditoriums at that location, and one year to upgrade
all auditoriums within the circuit. I'm not sure if this covenant is being
enforced but it makes conversion very costly and is totally unnecessary.
- Exhibitor must pay a royalty fee on all alternative content exhibited to
the Studios while the VPF contract is in force. Theory: since we are
paying the VPF we get our take on all content using the D-Cinema
equipment.
- Movies released in 3D format must be exhibited in 3D if the exhibitor is
3D equipped. This makes for conflicts, as a 3D feature already playing,
and contracted say for 3 weeks makes compliance with this stipulation
impossible and may result is a forfeiture of that movie.
These are but a few of the stipulations under the Studios' VPF scheme. But the giant loophole - that gets the Studios out of the deal (does anyone really think the Studios will be paying the VPF for 10 years as is stipulated in the VPF contract) is the one that states: the Studios reserve the right to demand that the exhibitor upgrade to the latest technical standards as stipulated by the Studios and non-compliance will void the VPF contract.
So there you have it. Enjoy!
Best and Happy Movie Going.
Jim Lavorato
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