I used to manage a chain of video stores during the 90s. During those years nearly all movies were released on VHS for rental at first. We used to pay between $55 and $80 per tape! That's not a typo. When this particular film came out my biggest store purchased 20 for rental totaling about $1,200. That's why videos used to rent for $3.00 a night. Little by little more videos started coming out at "purchase pricing", where stores and customers could purchase for around $20 retail, $15 wholesale. Then DVDs hit and almost overnight "rental pricing" (the $60 per copy price) was gone.
During the peak years big movies would come out first at rental pricing, then about 6 months to a year they would re-release them at sale pricing so that customers could own it. This is also the reason you see rare tapes going for big bucks on Ebay even today. Because they were never released for sale, only rental copies. On these titles ("Song of the South" was one, still never sold other than early VHS) it was often due to the copyright holder dying before the movies were put out for sale, then they sometimes got caught up in courts while the families of the original copyright holder would try to get the rights. The original "Gone in 60 Seconds" was like this, unavailable for more than 20 years. But I owned a "previously viewed" copy that was originally in a rental store and sold it around 2000 for about $250.
"He's not Judge Judy and executioner!"
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