DVD
Why has this DVD gone out of print so soon after it was released? Used copies on Amazon are going for over $45
Bad move, Warner Bros.
Why has this DVD gone out of print so soon after it was released? Used copies on Amazon are going for over $45
Bad move, Warner Bros.
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shareOne can only hope that Criterion has picked up the rights to it.
shareIt's out of print due to legal tie-ups, as detailed in this 2004 news article:
Truffaut heirs sue Warner over DVD release
PARIS, July 9 (AFP) - Heirs of the late French director Francois Truffaut, who died of a brain tumour 20 years ago, have launched legal proceedings against Time Warner and its French subsidiary over the DVD rights to his Oscar-winning 1973 film "La Nuit Americaine", aka "Day for Night".
Lawyers for Laura, Eva and Josephine Truffaut said they were applying for a summary judgement against Time Warner Inc and Warner Bros France for the "illegal production and sale of the DVD" of the movie, which won an Oscar for Best Foreign Film.
The heirs are asking that an expert be named to assess alleged damage and force Warner to pay out a minimum EUR 1 million (USD 1.2 million) provision and EUR 500 per day
pending a halt in the production and sale of the DVD, the family lawyer Francois Zimeray told AFP.
"This case is typical of the difficult relations between artists and the giants of world distribution," Zimeray said. Truffaut himself "never made a cent" on the contracts with Warner, who said the account was in the red.
Rights to the film, released in theatres May 24, 1973, were ceded to Warner by the French company Films du Carosse for 30 years, thus expiring May 24, 2003.
But the French plaintiffs claim Time Warner and its subsidiaries produced a DVD of the "New Wave" director's movie "only shortly before" the expiry of the rights. The DVD was released in France on November 20, 2002, and in the United States on March 18, 2003.
The film firms thus "became counterfeiters because they continued to produce and sell (it) posterior to May 24," according to the text of the legal assignation.
A bailiff has reported that the DVD was on sale in Paris stores June 30.
"There is a tolerance allowing editors of books and records to sell stocks after rights expire," Zimeray said. "But when tens of thousands of DVDs are produced shortly before the deadline, that is called abusing the law."
He said Warner had ceded the rights worldwide to television stations, and that in France one channel had screened the film last June 3 after acquiring rights for a nine-month period as from last March 1.
The proceedings have been filed before the Nanterre law court in the western Paris suburbs.
© AFP
Oh that makes sense...thanks for the article
shareI remember having bought the DVD totally on a whim at Best Buy a ways ago--not having too much fondness for Truffaut at the time (he has now become of my favorite directors) I'd thought I'd give the film (now also one of my favorite films) a shot. I think it ran for $12.99. Crazy how production deals/lawsuits/the whole thing works, isn't it?
share^Ditto, I picked it up on a whim being a fan of Truffaut.
Sort of like my Ed Wood find.
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I know the last message is from one year ago. But if you are interested on this wonderful movie on DVD it's currently available on amazon. I just bought it last month.
The picture is quite clean and smooth, the audio is only DD 1.0 but IMO fits perfectly the mood of the movie.
The extras are interesting although not exhaustive. I'd have loved an audio-commentary by a film scholar. Perhaps by Mrs. Insdorf.