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Harry Potter & The Chamber of Secrets Leaked

Posted by CmdrTaco on Tue Nov 12, 2002 11:39 AM
from the gotta-hate-when-that-happens dept.
huh12312 writes "Illegal piraters have done it again. On Monday, the second movie in the acclaimed series of seven was leaked onto the internet to the horror of Warner Brothers. With so many blockbusters due out this holiday season this problem will only increase in the coming months." Also note that it will make millions and millions of dollars anyway. I'll probably be there opening night.
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  • Big deal (Score:5, Funny)

    by Violet Null (452694) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:40AM (#4651461)
    You've been able to buy the script at any bookstore for years now.
    • Re:Big deal (Score:5, Interesting)

      by FortKnox (169099) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:45AM (#4651508) Homepage Journal
      So true.
      I actually heard people bitch and moan at the end of Fellowship of the Ring, because the movie stopped in the middle of the story, and they'd have to wait a full year to find out the next part.
      Eventually, someone yelled "Its a classic book! Go buy it and read it and you'll know the whole trilogy before the next movie comes out!"
      • Re:Big deal (Score:5, Funny)

        by Nintendork (411169) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:20PM (#4651844) Homepage
        Yeah, but that would involve reading.

        As a modern man, I demand that my only sources of entertainment involve moving pictures. I also demand that the fast food industry be held accountable for my weight problem.

        -Lucas

        • Re:Big deal (Score:5, Funny)

          by ciscoeng (411359) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @01:08PM (#4652253)
          " As a modern man, I demand that my only sources of entertainment involve moving pictures. I also demand that the fast food industry be held accountable for my weight problem."

          -Lucas

          George? Is that you?
        • Re:Big deal (Score:5, Insightful)

          by DrMaurer (64120) <danlowlite@NOSpaM.gmail.com> on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:57PM (#4652172) Homepage
          Because I, in reality, heard someone say, and it seemed quite sincere to me:

          "Jeez, they left that one wide open for a sequel."

          For the record, I think the MPAA has a lot less to worry about from internet leaks than the RIAA. The theatre is a good place to watch a movie, most of the time (if you wait a week or two or even three for the big releases, or your movie is a little more undeground, you have less people even.) Don't underestimate the environment. I listen to music in my car, mostly.

          The avg. movie still is around 700 megs big and often has bad compression artifacts. An album is of course, smaller.

          Unless, of course, it's a really bad movie, one of those that they don't show to reviewers first, and they download a copy and tell everyone it's shitty.

          Of course, occasionally the power of people to detect crap is amazing. Only occasionally. The Cast Away movie with Madonna only grossed a couple hundred grand the first week. More money than I will ever make, but maybe it'll be a lesson to the studios.
          • by guacamolefoo (577448) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @02:04PM (#4652854) Homepage Journal
            "That ends with them throwing the ring in the volcano, right?" Well, it doesn't end there. They go home and some thugs have taken over the Shire and...I mean, yeah, that's how it ends.

            Actually, that's exactly how it ends. There is no retaking of the Shire in the movie. Saruman dies in The Two Towers


            Uh...what about Frodo and Bilbo and Gandalf departing from the Grey Havens? And Merry and Pippen, etc., riding back to Hobbiton without them? That was one of the best parts of the book -- incredibly sad, poignant, and CUT OUT OF THE FRICKING MOVIE?!?!?!?!?!! Come on!!

            You mean that Glenn Yarbrough won't sing the Road goes ever on and on? Are you telling me the animated fricking Kasey Casem version has a better ending that the Peter Jackson one?!?!??? I feel so betrayed! Galadriel had better show her f-ing tits, or I'm definitely not going to see Return of the King.

  • by Roskolnikov (68772) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:41AM (#4651465)
    call me paranoid, I do not think that these 'leaks' are
    unintentional, I think the mpaa might be releasing them
    in this fashion just to prove there is a problem, has anyone noticed the quality of the 'pirated prerelease' versions lately?
      • No, that's not the logic. The logic is more under the "self fulfilling prophecy" world.

        The MPAA claims that they need ultra-strong protection to avoid movie leaks.

        They currently don't have these protections and look... ...the movie leaked.

        See? We need these protections.

        Needless to say they could guarantee that the "crisis" occurred by leaking it themselves. (This is not saying that they did, but that's the logic of the original post, not leak == bad, mpaa == bad therefor leak == mpaa)
          • by RollingThunder (88952) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @01:09PM (#4652263)
            However, there's one facet you overlooked - and that's the movie theater OWNER, who for some reason enjoys allowing copies to be made.

            I have heard it told - not witnessed myself, mind you - that some of the "theater tapings" have been made in completely empty theaters, with only the camera running, and often before the official release date.

            The theaters HAVE to get the film before opening day, after all... well before it in most cases, because you do NOT want to have half a premiere because of some fedex delay.

            Couple that advance availability with just one owner who feel philanthropic, and you have a very high quality theater recording hitting the streets in advance of the release.
      • I'm going to play the devils advocate and champion the "The MPAAA released it theory here"

        Ok, your first major assumpion: If these people really believe that the internet is one big conduit to steal music and movies

        Lets get real people. They don't belive this any more than Phillip Morris belived that smoking was healthy. These people are in the buisness of making movies based on the statistical sampling of a population (to determine what will sell). Don't you think they have access to the very same statistics you and I do?

        They -=know=- just as well as we do that they're not loosing revenue to pirated movies. The numbers aren't there. They -=know=- that the overwhelming majority of their target audiance for every movie they release (execpt maybe Sneakers or whatever) is so technologicaly clueless as to require tech support to find the "any" key.

        Given that, what would you do? Push Congress to enact tougher laws daming the P2P flow. Why? Because while your target audiance may not be tech savy today, in 30 years -=our=- kids (who are damn sure going to be recompiling the kernal when they're four are going to be the target audiance. And then they -=will=- loose money hand over fist.

        Furthermore, creating this kind of situation does allow price fixing! If enough Senators and Congresscritters are convinced that the Movie Industry really does need to change $9.55 for a ticket to re-coup the costs of movie piracy then there is no way in hell the Justice Department will ever prosecute (yes, I know the JD isn't run by the Congress, I also know what log rolling is).

        Remember, all the figures here are ethereal. HPACOS may shatter all box office records. But the MPAA can still point to Kazaa and say, "
        Well, we can find some 1.3 Million copies of this file world wide, which indicates that we lost (9.55 x 1.3Million) 12.4 million in potential revenues."

        As long as the MPAA counts every downloaded movie as a lost ticket sale (and probably a lost VHS sale, a lost DVD sale, and several more for the various special editions) they will never loose this argument. They will -=always=- be in the hole because the ASSUMPTION is that they are in the hole. No data can exist to disprove the assumption because in order to get that data you need to get 1.3 million people (or whatever) to admit to commiting a CRIME.

        • by schlach (228441) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:58PM (#4652175) Journal
          I gotta go with TGK on this one. If you want to play conspiracy theory, walk with me.

          The number of people that are able to download movies P2P *
          • the percentage that want to watch Harry Potter period *
          • the percentage that want to watch a crappy version on their crappy computers *
          • the percentage that won't also want to see it in the theatre *
          • the percentage that would have seen it if it hadn't been leaked...

          is probably going to cost them about $200 bucks.

          Then factor in how much they'd lose in DVD sales eventually to the hard-core fans that aren't morally shy about downloading a DivX rip off Kazaa. If that would be substantial, they can release their own crappy-quality leak that will be instantly proliferated throughout the community, since it's the only one there at first. This will make finding the high-quality rip that will eventually be made from a DVD that much harder. It's much more insidious a way to spoof than just having void files that are the same size, ala the RIAA, because plenty of people will download and share it, thinking they've got the "real" version and not knowing there's a much better one out there.

          Add to that the publicity value in the war against terrori^H^H^H^H err pirates to "Congresscritters" and the public. "Hollywood bribes Democrats, Republicans" doesn't capture the public headlines as well as "Hollywood campaigns to combat pirates" - "Avast, ye scurvy dogs" says Jack Valenti.

          I'm not saying the MPAA is behind this leak, I'm just saying that, if they weren't, the might want to think about it...
  • by slaker (53818) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:41AM (#4651466)
    Was a million geeks all hitting Gnutella at the same time.
  • by GothChip (123005) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:42AM (#4651470) Homepage
    How was that leaked when it was released here in the UK last weekend? Did they leak it to the cinemas too?

    Well the release date is this Friday but they had advanced previews last weekend at pretty much every cinema in the country.
  • Thats Strange.... (Score:4, Informative)

    by tonywestonuk (261622) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:42AM (#4651473)
    I saw it at a UK cinema on Sunday, yes it was a public showing before you ask!!.... I bet somone has taken in a camcorder as what so usually happens, but I'd hardley call it a 'leak'..
    Tony.
  • Of course... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kafka93 (243640) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:42AM (#4651477)
    .. it will make millions, because nobody who really cares about seeing the movie will want to watch a grainy telesync with poor sound.

    That movies are always going to be leaked and pirated should be no surprise to the studios. And it shouldn't worry them: even the pirates will pay to see the movies at the big screen - those who care about watching a flick will want to see it *properly*; those who would only pirate the film would doubtless have waited for the video release, at best, and the TV release at worst.
    • Re:Of course... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anenga (529854) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:10PM (#4651749)
      I hate it when I want to go see a movie and my friends say "Oh, just saw that. It was okay." "What do you mean? It comes out tomarrow?" "I downloaded it on Kazaa."

      Or worse, they tell you what happens in the movie. I make sure I always get good seats and tickets a few days ahead of time to see a movie, and it becomes increasingly annoying when your friend thinks he's l33t because he saw the movie before it was released. That's probably my biggest annoyance. People who go to the theaters now are considered "Pigeons", at least in the teenager group.

      That's why I love it when they AIM me and say "Shit! I spent 5 hours downloading a movie and it was blank!"
  • by Pave Low (566880) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:42AM (#4651479) Journal
    why didn't you guys link to mirrors of like last time, with the doom 3 alpha? [slashdot.org]

    you could have saved us the trouble of looking for it on kazaa.

  • I've already downloaded Episode 3 off of Kazaa! ... Today is Friday, if you disagree then I don't care cause I'll soon be in Ireland and you won't. So there.
  • by 3.5 stripes (578410) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:43AM (#4651487)
    I know my kid wouldn't settle for seeing some grainy rip of a movie at 200 x 180 (or whatever crappy res it looks least bad at).

    Hardly a comparison to the movie on a big screen.

    It's also not like you can't read the book to find out the ending, sheesh.
    • by capt.Hij (318203) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:52AM (#4651589) Homepage Journal
      I'll probably be there opening night. - Commander Taco

      Not only that but you can't watch it with Commander Taco. I know my kid would be screaming if I tried to go a Harry Potter movie without the commander. Fortunately, the folks at Warner Brothers realize this and won't be too upset over the whole affair.

      Now if I can only keep him from spilling his soft drink on me when he tries to get past us, then I would be happy...

  • by easyfrag (210329) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:43AM (#4651493)

    Illegal piraters?

    Wow, President Bush reads Slashdot!
  • What?? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:44AM (#4651496)
    Also note that it will make millions and millions of dollars anyway. I'll probably be there opening night.

    Oh, okay, so piracy is okay. Thank you for your social commentary "CmdrTaco," I'll be sure not to feel bad when I download it and the company doesn't get my money for a movie ticket or DVD purchase.
      • Re:What?? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by SirSlud (67381) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:12PM (#4651772) Homepage
        > Or the best: if I can download this movie for free, it will encourage me to steal^H^H^H^H^H buy more DVDs!

        Siphoning gas from your neighbours tank is dead simple. But people don't do it. Why? It's stealing.
        But explain to me why people don't mind steal^H^Hcopying movies/music/etc when clearly there are so many other things that can be easily stolen in life? Gee, maybe because its not stealing. Its copying. And yes, it can be terribly immoral (ie, selling bootlegs for profit, or downloading movies to circumvent renting or theatre going altogether.)

        Also note that copyright holders' rights have never been 100% protected. If you listen to a CD at a friends house, I could easily make the case that you're stealing the music because _you_ didn't buy the CD.

        If you wanna build a case for the immorality of copying content without paying for it, at least respect that a majority of peoples' behaviours dictate the morality. Morality isn't simply somebody or some group passing a law; that doesn't make breaking that law intrinsically immoral. I'm tired of folks using whats set in law as the yard stick of morality. There are plenty of legal things I can do to you that is immoral, and there are plenty of illegal things I can do that are moral.

        > Or the best: if I can download this movie for free, it will encourage me to steal^H^H^H^H^H buy more DVDs!

        That might be a valid point if you had any real (not annecdotal) evidence backing it up. I can understand your reasoning (if you can have it for free, why would anybody rent the DVD) .. but it flies in the face of so many other cases of observed human behaviour. There are plenty of things that are easy to steal, and people don't do it nearly to the degree that people copy movies and music. This is the key point that folks postulating your line of reasoning seem unable to explain.

        If you want to convince anybody that copying movies and music is bad, you might start with explaining why the amount of people stealing music and movies is so much higher than people who steal ungaurded physical objects. You'd probably also want to make sure that you viewed the rampant cassette copying of the 80s as highly immoral as well for consistancy (in addition to recording TV, recording the radio, etc).
          • by GlassHeart (579618) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @02:28PM (#4653103) Journal
            Copying work without the owners permission is theft.

            Killing someone is murder.

            Oh, wait, except when the fetus isn't born yet, then it's abortion. Legal in some places.

            Oh, wait, except when the guy is a murderer being executed by the State. Legal in some places.

            Oh, wait, except when he's trying to kill you and you shoot him first, then it's self defense, and legal probably everywhere.

            Oh, wait, except when the guy is really old and sick and would rather die. I don't know if euthanasia is legal anywhere yet, but it's at least being argued.

            Oh, wait, except when you kill yourself, then it's not a crime nearly everywhere.

            So no, it's not theft the same way shoplifting is. The damage (lost potential sale) done to the victim is simply not the same as if the CD was shoplifted. In fact, the damage you make may be less than setting up a website to say how much the album sucks. Think about that, because it's protected free speech.

            Note that I'm not saying it's right, just that it's not black and white like physical theft. Specifically, there should be a difference (in law) between someone who "pirates" for personal use, and someone who distributes, because they cause different damages.

            Think of a paper book. You can buy it, read it, and give it to your friend to read. In fact, two people read the book, and only paid once. Now, how is that substantially different from beaming an ebook to your friend before you're finished reading? What about after you're finished reading?

            It is different, by the way, because your friend could potentially want to read it so badly he buys his own copy - potential lost sale. However, the act of beaming the ebook is not the same as shoplifting, because its impact on the copyright owner is not the same. Think of the difference between murder and suicide, and while some people consider both immoral (perhaps even equally immoral), only murder is generally an actual crime.

  • Thank goodness (Score:4, Insightful)

    by BigGar' (411008) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:45AM (#4651511) Homepage
    I really enjoy watching a poor copy of a film on my small computer screen and 2" speakers, day's before going to see it in the theater. I was worried I'd have to see it for the first time on the big screen with surround sound. Thanks for saving me, kudos to you!!!!
  • Ewwww! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:47AM (#4651540)
    Harry's Chamber Pot of Secrets has leaked? Gross!
  • by Camulus (578128) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:49AM (#4651564) Journal
    From the info file linked to:

    Release: 11/09/02
    Quality: CAM

    Some how I think I would rather pay and see it with none of the screen chopped off and in full quality (esp sound). Just because it exists, doesn't mean it is really worth having.
  • OMG! (Score:5, Funny)

    by GMontag (42283) <gmontag.guymontag@com> on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:50AM (#4651574) Homepage Journal
    It starts small, theivery by sneeking popcorn and cokes from "the street" into the theater, then it just gets worse...
    reading the script in the library or bookstore years before release...
    stealing the whole movie before it appears magically on the silver screen! it is too much! we are a lawless society!
  • by asv108 (141455) <alex@@@phataudio...org> on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:51AM (#4651583) Homepage Journal
    A slashdot story for everytime a movie is leaked? I can understand Star Wars, but Harry Potter? What is the criteria for allowing leaked movie news to be posted on slashdot since its a pretty common event anymore? I can see the stories now, "Ya Ya Sisterhood 2 LEAKED!"
  • by Ost99 (101831) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:53AM (#4651595)
    The amount of money I spend going to the cinema and buying DVDs is mostly a fixed number: the rest of my money. No matter how good quality the Harry Potter II rip I probably will find on DC the next couple of days is, I'll still show up at the cinema, atleast twice. And I'll probably buy the DVD as well. I don't think *good* movies loose much money to piracy at all.

    The not so good movies might loose some of their marked if they are heavily pirated. If I'd downloaded Reign Of Fire before I went to see it at the cimema, I would probably have seen another movie instead. That way Hollywood would still get all its money, but I wouldn't feel ripped of. I can't afford to see all movies (I don't even have time for that), so there is no money *lost* if that was the way it happened.

    Now I bet the quality of the copy released on the net isn't that great, and even watching it might ruin the whole experience. Fitting punishment for beeing so silly.

    - Ost
  • by droopus (33472) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @11:53AM (#4651603)
    The release of Harry Potter is a crappy cam [vcdquality.com], and won't affect Theatrical revenue. It's almost unwatchable.

    The bigger question is, does film piracy affect revenue at all? A film is not like music: Nevermind and Sticky Fingers will be just as valuable to me in ten years, and I'll listen to them a lot as a soundtrack to whatever else I'm doing. A film takes 100% of my concentration, (well most of it anyway) and you can't watch a film while you do something else..so film and music piracy are vastly different things.

    Let's look at a few examples: In the Theatrical Window, Spiderman both broke box office and piracy records, hitting tens of thousands of copies a day at its peak.

    In the Home Video window, the Spiderman DVD was released on pirate channels more than a month early and yet it still is going to break all sales records. 28 MILLION in preorders, which blows away anything before it.

    The exact same thing happened with Shrek last year..most pirated film - most pirated DVD - best selling DVD.

    While it would be difficult to quantify, it's possible that piracy acts simply as promotion when it comes to film: it certainly didn't cause the films above to fail on any scale, and probably won't affect Harry Potter either.

    The million dollar question: could the use of piracy channels as a promotional venue actually increase film revenue?

    Everyone assumes Valenti and Rosen are right: that piracy is damaging the film and music businesses. But Valenti was dead wrong about VCRs in the 70's and I suggest he's wrong about digital delivery and piracy in the 21st Century.
      • by droopus (33472) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @01:42PM (#4652642)
        That's why I said "it would be difficult to quantify" in my original post. As the troll [slashdot.org] said above, correlation does not imply causation. Totally correct of course.

        Same thing in your case. You suggest that if piracy was not possible, 40 million would buy the DVD. You are assuming that piracy is a negative revenue generator.

        But in my hypothesis (and it's nothing but a hypothesis) piracy might actually drive revenue. If this is true, then it's possible that without those twenty million illegal DVD downloads, Dreamworks might have only sold 10 million Shrek DVDs.

        Be tough to prove it either way, but remember that the MPAA said the VCR would destroy the film industry back in the 70's. Now? Home Video is the number one revenue stream for ALL seven major Hollywood film studios.

        I'm not insisting I'm right. But what if it's true? Could Jack Valenti possibly be wrong ...twice?
  • by scotay (195240) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:06PM (#4651718)
    It seems that all the Hollywood movies I've seen recently are going for that washed-out, slate gray look of Saving Private Ryan. I'm thinking these cinematographers are now filming these things on budget camcorders in darkened theaters just to reproduce Spielberg's look.

    Some are even resorting to adding a pixelized 'NB' or scary watermarks as a cheap play on audience emotions. Heck, some of these hacks are even adding audience reaction to the soundtracks or overlaying eerie back outlines of audience members on top of the primary action. I think we can blame Woody Allen's Purple Rose of Cairo for this new trend in filmmaking.

    If these Hollywood hacks can't come up with some new visual ideas, I'm staying away from news servers altogether.
  • value added (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fermion (181285) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:11PM (#4651764) Homepage Journal
    Like any industry, the amount of money that one can make depends on the perceived 'value added' to the product. The movie industry 'adds value' to the books and expects to make a profit on that addition. The question is how. If the theaters can 'add value' to the viewing experience, then the cinemas and the movie makers make a profit. If the cinemas do not, then perhaps the movie companies can make a profit through video rental and sales, at the expense of ticket sales. Or, perhaps the movie is such a dud that no one wants to pay for the movie and will just watch the grainy pirated copy, shadow heads and all. Or, perhaps, the movie is so bad that the leaked copy, which should be a prime advertising tool, so sickens people that they swear never to see the movie. We all have wasted money on movies that made us sick.

    The fact is that the entertainment industry does not take 'value added' seriously enough. They put two good songs on an album (blues traveler 'four' comes to mind) and expect the populous to pay $20. Why should they, just download the two songs from the net(or, for those who can remember, record it from the radio, anyone got albums from the late night full play?). The same is true for movie theaters. They have 30 screens, 5 movies, only of which one are worth seeing at the theater, and the staff antagonizes you the whole time. How much money do they expect make. And yet I do not see the movie industry, those great champions of legislating profit from intellectual property, doing a thing to help the poor suffering movie theaters. Rather the studios leave movie theaters to fend for themselves and legislate for copy protection in hope of making money on the DVD release.

    Harry potter has buzz, is probably a good movie, and is squarely directed at the annoying child demographic. The leak will certainly affect ticket sales in some minuscule manner, but isn't going to make anyone homeless. It is too effective of a method to keep generally undisciplined children quite for an hour or so.

  • by telstar (236404) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:26PM (#4651908)
    The least you could do would be to provide some download links. After all ... we've probably all finished the Doom3 Alpha you linked to by now...
  • by DaveOf9thKey (599178) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:42PM (#4652034) Homepage Journal

    Film piracy is never going to cut into box office dollars, period. No computer setup -- not even one with a projector screen and 5.1 surround sound -- will ever duplicate the theater experience, especially with a grainy telesync. The big screen and crowded theater hold too much fascination for us as human beings, and it won't go away any time soon.

    The place where film piracy will hurt the most is in the home video market, because DivX rips of DVD films are at least VHS quality, usually better in some cases. Still, the movie industry has an advantage over the music industry here, because DivX rips are hard to download and DVDs are cheap. Hell, it's easier to rent a DVD and rip it yourself then to hunt down a film on Gnutella, and even then, you're still supporting the filmmakers in some small way, because you're paying the rental fee.

    If the movie industry can improve the video quality and service quality of sites like MovieLink [movielink.com] and CinemaNow [cinemanow.com], they'll have the one thing the music industry never really created -- a convenient, inexpensive alternative to piracy in the marketplace. Gee, is that all it takes? Who knews?

    • by Kjella (173770) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @01:43PM (#4652649) Homepage
      No computer setup -- not even one with a projector screen and 5.1 surround sound -- will ever duplicate the theater experience

      Yep, nothing like
      • Waiting for the movie you want to see to show
      • Having to order ahead to get the best seats
      • Actually having to get to/from the cinema
      • Buying overpriced food/drink
      • ...and it's not even what you like
      • See thirty minutes of commercials
      • The latecomer that needs to get past you
      • Him or her asking around for what has happened
      • ...and somebody answering, in great detail
      • The crunchy snack-munchers
      • With obligatory noisy snack wrapping
      • The one who still forgot to turn off his cell
      • And answers it...
      • The two that are talking about everyhing but the movie.
      • The two who've seen it 100 times before and are discussing the ending already.
      • A so crappy movie that you'd rather just stop and see something else
      • Wanting to pause the movie to go to the bathroom
      • And I don't want to get started on why you might want to watch pr0n or other exciting movies at home, alone or in company...


      Yep, I'm sure there aren't any good reasons to sitting at home in front of a good home cinema.

      Kjella
  • by iabervon (1971) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:43PM (#4652043) Homepage Journal
    At some point, the MPAA will realize that these things actually serve to promote the movies. People will go to see the movie (provided it didn't suck, which they'd probably have found out from reviews anyway) to see it with quality that isn't terrible. Consider how many people buy DVDs of movies they have on VHS for the difference in quality there; now consider the difference in quality between a camcorder and a movie theater.

    The MPAA has some clever people; it seems like they could figure this out. Or they could ask the RIAA about it; they've been paying ClearChannel tons of money for decades to distribute low-quality versions of music before it is widely available. Maybe they're afraid the pirates will start charging them millions of dollars to pirate their movies?
  • old, old, old (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ucblockhead (63650) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @01:02PM (#4652206) Homepage Journal
    When I was a teenager, a friend called me up, ecstatic, about getting his hands on a videotape of The Last Starfighter [imdb.com], which was opening in a couple of weeks.

    I sat there watching, squinting, trying to make out the plot through grainy video and wavering camera, wondering why the hell we were bothering.

    It did, indeed, cost Hollywood $6.50, though, because the movie sucked, and there was no way we'd pay to see the real thing.

    But funny, this taping, which has obviously been going on for twenty years now, has not killed Hollywood yet.

  • by Animats (122034) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @01:49PM (#4652711) Homepage
    I suspect the studio wanted something like this to happen. The new HP movie hasn't been getting as much press as the first one. So it opened in the UK last weekend. Although it's billed as a "preview", it's not. Look at this show list. [cineworld.co.uk] 19 screenings each day last weekend. That's a multi-screen booking at a multiplex, not a reaction preview. Quite a number of UK locations seem to have been running that movie last weekend.

    There's a big Bond movie opening in a week, and so the marketeers for HP have to get attention on their product before they get run over. So anything that gets people talking about the movie...

  • by muffen (321442) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @01:50PM (#4652719)
    Leaked must be the wrong word. This is a screener, and it started in cinemas last Thursday in the UK/Ireland.

    I don't call this leaked. Instead, I would asume this to be completly normal. This what happens to all big movies. First you get a screener, and then someone manages to produce a decent copy. Finally you get the DVDrip. As far as I know, this is the normal thing for all movies...

    Anyways, in regards to the movie, I must say that I liked it. I think it was better than the first one, as more things happened all the time. It is fairly long, roughly three hours, but definatly worth seeing. See it in the cinema, as watching the screener (in my opinion) completly destroys the experience. The sound is really good and really helps you get into the "Harry Potter atmosphere".
  • by Snaller (147050) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @02:42PM (#4653235) Journal
    As opposed to Legal Pirates? Which would be... what? The IRS? RIAA?
    • by Anonymous Custard (587661) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:00PM (#4651670) Homepage Journal
      It is totally, entirely, and completely the fault of poor security at the film distributor.

      So by your logic, in every case where an abused woman doesn't know enough karate to fend off an attacker and she is mugged, dateraped, or worse, you think that is her fault? Are stores that get robbed to blame for not having armed guards posted at the door?

      Sorry, but theft is totally, entirely, and completely the fault of the THIEF, never the fault of the victim.
    • by plover (150551) on Tuesday November 12 2002, @12:17PM (#4651822) Homepage Journal
      -1, wrong.

      The actual act of copying the film to video probably took place in a movie theatre in England, where it's already been released. The distribution channels are probably secure, but they're delivering media to thousands of untrustworthy theatres.

      In the past, the studios have used unique-by-theatre editing to identify the the leaky theatres. They may have done so this time as well. With a guaranteed blockbuster like this movie, they'd have been irresponsible if they didn't take some precautions. Don't be surprised if you see an offending theatre up against the wall in a multi-million pound lawsuit, and criminal charges filed against the owners.

      Media theft is one of the driving motivations behind George Lucas' attempt to build a fibre-optic movie distribution network in America. It will ensure that the only pirated copies that come out are ugly camcorder-in-the-theatre recordings that aren't fit to be viewed. And technological tricks such as dynamically varying the frame rate (possible with a digital projection system) will render most of those tapes unwatchable.

      (I'll drop the phony British accent now, Rupert.)

    • "Look, someone's leaked the new Harry Potter movie onto the Internet! Geeze, being as how I'm such a tremendous fan, I think I'll download it."

      (days pass, as the movie is slowly and painfully downloaded, in pieces, from any number of p2p networks)

      "Boy, the movie was awesome, but the pirated copy sucked ass! The picture was lopped off at the edges, someone didn't adjust the camcorder and the colors were washed out, the dialog was basically incomprehensible, and people kept standing up and blocking the screen."

      "I'm SUCH a huge Harry Potter fan, but since I've already seen the crappy camcorder rip, I guess I don't need to spend $8 to go see the movie anymore. And I certainly don't need to drop $30 on the DVD, nosir. 'Cause the noisy, incomplete DivX-encoded version was enough for me. Come to think of it, perhaps I'll stop buying Harry Potter merchandise as well."

      I'm not going to argue that it's *right* to distribute copyrighted works over the Internet. But you cannot by any means claim that Chamber of Secrets being leaked is somehow going to cut into the movie's box office gross. At best, the camcorder rip or the telesync (which is what they call it when they pipe the sound in from a theater-supplied hearing aid) is a pale imitation of the real cinema experience. People who were going to see the movie in the first place, won't be satisfied.