Disney Will Stop Releasing 4K Physical Media from Its Live-Action Catalogue - Following the release of Hocus Pocus and Home Alone on 4K, Disney will stop releasing library titles in Ultra HD.

Pickle Dick

JUNAY
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Fans of physical media have just been dealt a major blow by Disney. The company is reportedly no longer going to be releasing 4K copies of its library titles via physical media. This means many classic Disney movies, as well as the huge collection of classics that the company inherited as part of the Fox merger last year, will not be making it to 4K Ultra HD. The upcoming 4K releases of Hocus Pocus and Home Alone are expected to be the last older movies to get a physical release in the HD format.

According to a new report, the company will only be releasing new animated Disney movies, Pixar, Star Wars and Marvel titles on 4K disc in the future. Disney has not been particularly eager when it comes to releasing popular movies from its library on 4K in recent years, with Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 becoming the studio's first ever physical release in the format back in 2017. It seems the company is aiming to put all of its resources into streaming, specifically Disney+, which is viewed as a massive part of the company's future. Meanwhile, physical media has become an increasingly niche market.

But for those who do still purchase physical media, this is significant. Not only does Disney have a massive collection of movies that haven't made their way to HD in physical form, but Fox's huge back catalog that was part of the $71.3 billion deal last year will just be sitting on the shelf collecting dust. Just a few examples include Miracle on 34th Street, Mrs. Doubtfire and Fight Club. Disney was also not allowing theaters to book prints of classic movies for revival screenings following the merger with Fox last year. They are seemingly uninterested in capitalizing on the assets they purchased in this way.

There may be some exceptions to the rule. Namely, James Cameron. While Disney axed most of Fox's production slate after several of the movies inherited in the merger bombed in a big, bad way, they are very eager to get the Avatar sequels in theaters. This makes sense, as Avatar, until very recently, was the highest-grossing movie in history. As such, the report states that some of Cameron's classics like The Abyss and True Lies, which have not yet made it to 4K, may still be released on disc to appease the filmmaker. But they are seemingly in no rush to make it happen.

What is most peculiar about this decision is that other studios have managed to capitalize well on the 4K market by updating classic titles with new releases. Plus, with theaters being shut down since March, other companies, such as Sony, Universal, Paramount and Lionsgate, have all seen huge boosts to their home video revenue in recent months, as people are stuck at home during quarantine. Disney, with its hugely appealing library, could surely drum up a good deal of business with a stream of classic 4K releases. But that doesn't appear to be in the cards. This news comes to us via The Digital Bits.

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On one hand, I don't think anyone's really cared all that much about 4K Blu-Ray, but on the other hand, and I do agree with people on Twitter that its kind of strange Disney putting all of their resources into streaming over physical media during this time.
 

Tootsie Bear

kiwifarms.net
Of course Disney is going to do this, they want everybody subscribed to their terrible streaming platform
Right. I was never a fan of renting movies from Blockbusters or through Netflix. I always found it easier to purchase the movie when it was on sale at Wal-Mart or through Amazon. This way if I'm a fan of the movie I can keep and re-watch it at a later date, it not, give it away to friend. It's not the end of the world. But I'm not a fan of subscribing to a monthly service to watch Disney. I gave up cable T.V for a reason.
 

NOT Sword Fighter Super

"Cheerleeder" of Slapfights
True & Honest Fan
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Right. I was never a fan of renting movies from Blockbusters or through Netflix. I always found it easier to purchase the movie when it was on sale at Wal-Mart or through Amazon. This way if I'm a fan of the movie I can keep and re-watch it at a later date, it not, give it away to friend. It's not the end of the world. But I'm not a fan of subscribing to a monthly service to watch Disney. I gave up cable T.V for a reason.
They want us all back.
Or for us all to pirate everything.
I pick option 2.
 

NOT Sword Fighter Super

"Cheerleeder" of Slapfights
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
The endgame of digital media is the ability to not only edit media to be always politically advantageous but the ability to wipe out past media that is too popular or not as economic, in order to force the users to view shitty new stuff.
Star Wars being the prime example, although Indianan Jones and E.T. are also good ones.
 

sasazuka

Standing in the school hallway.
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On one hand, I don't think anyone's really cared all that much about 4K Blu-Ray

4K Blu-Ray is to regular Blu-Ray what Laserdisc was to VHS. I haven't bought any 4K Blu-Rays due to not having a 4K television or the player needed to play them but I still appreciate there being the option since maybe one day I will have a 4K TV.

Certainly this news will be a blow to anyone who has a proper home theatre and who wants to actually own their movies on a physical format with the highest possible resolution or who were hoping that 8K Blu-Rays would eventually become a thing.

I wonder if Disney will still sell 4K Blu-Rays in Japan, which has a higher percentage of physical media diehards?
 

Reverend

Avatar of Change
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I've seriously considered building my own media server, but it sounds like a hell of a lot of work.

No it's super easy, barely an inconvenience.

All you need is a plex server and that can be run on a Synology NAS device.


To do it RIGHT it costs several hundred at the least, thousands to store 4k video.

Checkout UnRAID and youtube videos by a guy called: spacedinvaderzero who walks you through setting it up.
 
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Aqua Panda

I've seen horrors… horrors that you've seen.
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This has been coming for awhile now. Physical media has been on the decline since 2011. The big companies have just been waiting for someone to make a move.

Still sucks though, Disc had the overall best presentation and lossless audio is generally a great thing.
 
At least I won’t have to hear them talk about a movie going “back in the vault” now.
Not a chance in hell. They'll still throw movies back into the mythical vault and put them out on the streaming service at random, short intervals. Heck, with the advent of online streaming they could even make it exclusive to certain regions or markets to encourage specific behavior in those markets. The wonderful world of Disney.
 

Michael Jacks0n

You know I'm bad, I'm bad.
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It's for a variety of reasons, but the obvious being....
  • They're desperately trying to push their streaming services on everyone. It used to be "Try Disney+", now it's "Use Disney+...or else."
  • This gives them the ability to make retcons, tampered editions, product placements, and political revisions. As stated before, the obvious being Star Wars and E.T., but also if they want to release a movie in China they can easily cowtow to Chinese censorship. Or let's say if a classic or iconic Disney film becomes deemed problematic in the near future: all they have to do is remove it from their streaming catalog, and viola! No more physical media of anything that may perpetuate racism, sexism, homophobia, or transphobia.
    • And with every film nowadays being made digitally, if a celebrity gets cancelled on social media, Disney can easily swap them out of the film and re-release it on their streaming service, effectively purging them ala Stalin.
 

Neanderthal Guru

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I still prefer physical media because a.) you don't need to store the massive files on a disc, and if you do you can free up that space whenever you want because you have the disc handy and can always re-rip it, b.) it allows me to more easily move the media between my PC and TV, which are very distant from each other, and probably most importantly c.) I'm worried about the current social culture coming after media to censor and cancel shit.

For example, there are people who have recently complained about Vasquez in Aliens wearing 'brownface', and I'm worried about that getting some kind of cancel treatment or digital alteration. God knows how old 'problematic' movies may be changed to suit the fragile demands of SJW types in the future.
 
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