Ben wrote: ↑April 16th, 2020, 4:35 am
I don’t get your comment...WOTW is certainly not PD, and not a Paramount "orphan" either...the reason we have not seen a remaster on this and other titles yet is that Paramount have very much kept the leash on their catalog titles and it’s only really in the last year, since Viacom merged them again with CBS that they have started to look again at their old films and try and work out why no-one put them out on Blu-ray, hence their new Paramount Presents Blu-ray line that will explore classic and deep catalog titles...just like WOTW.
Well, then, it's probably the package of 70's/80's back-catalog titles that Paramount gave home-video rights to Warner back in the early-mid 10's, which digital-happy Warner promptly ignored, that's the reason streaming is suddenly being deluged with Clue, Clueless, The Untouchables, 3 Days of the Condor, the Harrison Ford Jack-Ryan movies, and, yes, WOTW. (Among others.)
We know the current deluge of 70's-90's MGM, United Artists and Orion titles (including Golan/Globus and "Platoon"'s Hemdale) are due to bankruptcy in the 00's-10's, but that doesn't explain the Paramount titles, OR why Columbia has been shoving Gattaca, Eyes of Laura Mars and And Now For Something Completely Different down streaming's throat.
Couple that with Warners and Universal's new joint pact, coming into effect early 2021, which will also see them team up to consolidate marketing and distribution for new and classic catalog titles, and it looks like we might be heading into a new golden period where the bigger studios *finally* take note of the great work that the boutique distributors, as Twilight Time, Shout!, Arrow and the like, have been doing and work out that they can get a piece of that action.
The failure of Ultraviolet and digital-purchase is finally (delayed-reaction) starting to hit home for the studios, while the indie disc labels like Shout Factory, Criterion and Warner Archive only strengthened their disc-buff cults online. Sony certainly sat up and noticed when "Christine" and "Fright Night" routinely sold out within hours at Twilight Time.
Studios aren't eating crow quite yet, but they are thoughtfully plucking a feather or two and wondering what to set the oven for--Warner and Universal are putting a toe back into disc waters, and like Paramount, Columbia is also looking at "Select" labels for the remaining core of studio-icon vintage catalog titles. (Think: the ones that the studios held onto for Fathom screenings, and the dozen or so Paramount runs for their PlutoTV "Paramount Classics" channel).
...Told ya they'd come crawling back.
