Directors Guild of America is Fighting Edited Films 702
BoyPlankton writes "According to this article in the Salt Lake Tribune, film directors are gearing up to battle companies that are making a name for themselves selling/renting out edited films to consumers. The film directors claim that it's censorship and that it's morally, ethically, and legally wrong. The companies doing it claim that consumer rights trump the artists rights in this case, and that the artists don't have the moral ground to stand on because they already edit their films for T.V. and planes. Is this issue going to further erode our rights as a consumer, or will lawmakers take this opportunity to shore them up?"
This is an easy one. (Score:3)
Re:This is an easy one. (Score:2, Interesting)
Let me just get my notes straight.... (Score:2)
Blockbuster is not within its right to edit the film it offers to its customers, because that interferes with the creator's artistic vision.
Got it.
Re:This is an easy one. (Score:2, Interesting)
Which IMHO should also be done on the outside of the box for the Blockbuster versions.
Re:This is an easy one. (Score:3, Insightful)
From the original article, this usage (editing copies for someone) falls easily under First Sale. We don't have some third party company editing the films and reselling them. We have a third party company taking an already purchased tape and editing out the bits the person doesn't want.
The real question is, what happens when such a person buys a DVD ? Will the third-party company be guilty of violating the DMCA by ripping the disc, editing out the bits, and burning a new one? I suspect the answer is "Yes" -- which means that the DMCA kills First Sale for digital media. Some will argue that was one of the points of the DMCA, though certainly not one to which the MPAA would ever admit.
Re:This is an easy one. (Score:2)
OK, bad example.
But you get my point. If something says I wrote it, and I didn't write it, and it sucks, people are going to think I suck at writing. That's unfair.
Yeah, what he said... and more. (Score:3)
The point here is that they're not passing it off as the same movie. No one is being tricked into thinking they bought the original version - these versions are being specifically requested by the consumer.
Exactly. This just needs to be posted a few more times so that more people can see it.
These aren't derivative works, in that the other companies are claiming IP rights to the modified versions and selling them as "their own" movies. People (bashful, or maybe with wussie kids) seek out these companies who will modify the media they've already bought, or pay the companies specifically for the service of providing them with an edited version that does not contain the content they find objectionable. This is NOT censorship. Censorship would be one of these companies or the government blocking out the content in question without the knowledge/consent of the customers, and trying to pass it off as though this is the actual unmodified work. Nowhere does it say anything about people doing this. The movies are marked as edited, and are edited in specific ways as requested directly by the customer who is buying them.
This is just an even more absurd attempt to exercise power over the masses by the MPAA. And why don't they get it through their thick skulls that all these stupid things they're trying to do will only HURT their sales?? They actually fucking argued that "the films are the creative property of the filmmakers and cannot be altered without permission. A person who is troubled by the content of a film should simply not watch it. Censoring it even temporarily is not an option. ... Parents can control what their child sees by not allowing it in the house."
So they're basically telling people that, "instead of paying us full price for a product we made, and then paying somebody else to make it more convenient for you to skip past the parts you don't want to see, you should simply not pay us any money at all and not view any of the movie whatsoever." ...and thereby missing out on the all important 'artistic message' entirely. They're actually telling people to not buy their movies, instead of making simple modifications that would make them acceptable! But of course it's Napster's fault that movie sales are down...
And where the fuck are these people getting Blockbuster from?? It's not mentioned in the article at all! Nobody said Blockbuster was editing movies and renting them under the guise of being the original movies. Stop filling in the blanks with whatever pops up in your head people, and read the fuckin article!
Re:This is an easy one. (Score:5, Interesting)
This is the traditional American concept, but it is not true in most European countries, where there is a legally recognized "moral right" that cannot be sold, but that always remains with the creator of the work. For example, no matter how much money you pay in France for a classic work of art, you still can't deface it against the will of its original creator.
Re:This is an easy one. (Score:2)
Blockbuster? (Score:3, Insightful)
Target George Lucas (Score:2)
Re:Target George Lucas (Score:2, Funny)
Editing (Score:2)
Re:Editing (Score:2, Insightful)
Private Company (Score:2)
Stephen
Re:Private Company (Score:2)
Directors have a point. They made a movie in a certain way and expect it to be released that way. That would be like creating a painting and having someone change it completely and creating a whole new meaning than the one you intended.
That's wrong.
Re:Private Company (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, the library owns the books, not the person who checks them out, so of course it is destruction of property. But that is not a good example. Now ... what if a person BUYS a book from a bookstore and edits it, and then redistributes it. That certainly isn't censorship!
Oh, and I never said anything about copyright law, I believe you are right in that regard.
No mention of Blockbuster? (Score:4, Interesting)
IMO, there's a substantial difference between selling edited copies of a tape and using a system to overlay your own "edits" onto a full version you've bought. The former is an unauthorized motification, but the latter is within your personal rights for fair use, and not any different from simply hitting the mute or the fast forward button.
Re:No mention of Blockbuster? (Score:2)
That said, I agree with you here. So long as they aren't selling a modified version of the film, it should be legal under fair use for me to mask portions of it which I find objectionable. I still think it's a bit ridiculous, but to each his own.
Re:No mention of Blockbuster? (Score:5, Informative)
Well technically, blockbuster isn't censoring videos, they're just refusing to carry NC-17 rated films (like Crash [imdb.com]) so studios sell them edited copies because they still want to make money. (I wonder why competitors don't advertise they carry critically acclaimed films like Crash and Bad Lietenant uncut). I've talked to people who work at blockbuster who mistakenly think they're carrying the regular version of Crash. I think it had something to do with being a family oriented video store (so now the whole family can watch Crash together or something).
What I wish filmmakers would do, instead of seamlessly editing they're films for content, is to just insert squares over the naughty bits like Solondz did for Storytelling [imdb.com], so at least the consumer can easily tell the version they're watching is cut.
Also, you ever notice that now directors insert all the naughty bits into the 'Deleted Scenes' section of the DVD, like the commentary will say "Oh we couldn't include this or we'd get in trouble." Since the film is still an R-Rated film blockbuster has no trouble carrying it.
Contradictions everywhere (Score:5, Interesting)
On the current issue, who do they think they're fooling? "Edited for television" has been around at least since I've been allowed to stay up that late. Studios chop scenes out against directors' wishes all the time. What's next, a fight against chapter menus because everybody skips to the Good Parts?
Re:Contradictions everywhere (Score:3, Insightful)
Star Wars came out in 1977, but that's me being a nitpick.
As to you second point, you made the distinction right there: it's the studios that own the films who edit them for television, etc. We're talking about third parties who don't have that right.
Re:Contradictions everywhere (Score:3, Informative)
Off the main topic, but you are incorrect. The dispute was over the director's credit on "Empire Strikes Back," which was not directed by Lucas. It also was not just the DGA.
Both the Directors Guild and the Writers Guild fined Lucas for placing Irvin Kershner's and the writers' credits at the end of the movie while keeping the Lucasfilm Ltd. logo (the producer's credit) up front. Lucas resigned from the Directors Guild, which is why he could not hire an American director for "Jedi."
The two Guilds spend a lot of time looking out for the interests of their members, the people who actually create the content you watch, so I would say that they are within their rights to assert a Eurpoean-style 'moral right' to a work of art as its creator.
I think it's a very important issue, because in the US, only a director with 'final cut' in his or her contract can refuse someone else's edits. If the case holds up in court, it could change the whole "work for hire" concept of US contract law as it pertains to anything that could be a work of art. Of course, the contract could still call for the director/writer to produce an "R" rated movie, since, God forbid, an NC-17 rating might mean that a movie deals with topics unsuitable for kids. I mean seriously, Ferrara said that "Bad Lieutenant" was not a movie for children, nor were any of his other movies.
I think that this is why the studios themselves are not weighing in on this yet, because a) it's not costing them money, and b) they don't want to help the directors and writers get power over the work they produce.
Also, I presume that the companies involved are snipping out scenes for a fee. This makes me think that they have violated the copyright by redistributing an altered copy.
Obvious solution (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Obvious solution (Score:3, Insightful)
This is actually a pretty tricky issue. I can't just take a copyrighted work, alter it wihtout permission, and resell it. That's illegal. BUT... I want someone to seriously come and tell me that I can't rip a page out of a book I've bought. Altering a tape someone brings and asks for is one thing... ALtering it in advance, anticipating their desire is another... but are they legally the same? I mean, the real-time filters are obviously legal: noone can force a particular frame around what you view. Saying tis is illegal would make picture-in-picture illegal. But I think there is a legal case that a business cannot market a preedited version of copyrighted content without the consent of the copyright holder.
One more question: doesn't Blockbuster routinely edit movies it rents for content? I've heard this a million times but I've never seen absolute confirmation of it. If so I'm surprised it's not mentioned in the article...
Why shouldn't artists just give us what we want? (Score:3, Insightful)
You mean the way Stanley Kubrick did with Eyes Wide Shut [imdb.com]? There is a long orgy scene in EWS, that American censors said would have to go, because it was too explicit. In the version shown in American obstructions were digitally drawn in to hide the, um, "action".
But as to the deeper question, "why don't artists just give people what they want?" I am going to translate that to "why don't artists just give people what they are comfortable with, what won't challenge them?"
Well, many film-makers, writers, musicians, entertainers do exactly that. But there are great artists, like Kubrick, who feel they have a point of view that it is important to express. They think that they have an idea that it is important to present to the public even if it isn't completely comfortable at first.
Is this a good thing? It depends how you feel about cultural and social change. American writer Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote a book called Uncle Tom's Cabin [virginia.edu]. I believe the term "Uncle Tom" has a cultural meaning nowadays that it acquired in the last couple of generations. I believe that scholars such as those whose article you can read in the link I have pointed to, contend that UTC was an uncomfortable read for many, when it was published, because it put a human face on the effects of slavery for white American readers. So, yeah, I believe being open to letting artist's challenge our accepted views of things is worthwhile.
Re:My favorite theories... (Score:5, Funny)
This general principle is why so few people are using US quarters these days. It's also why the Pokemon game was so unpopular. It's also why no one went to see the 20th anniversary version of Star Wars, and why no one bought the video version. It's why the sales of DVDs are approximately zero (all those scenes! all those options! too confusing!)
Art? Pah. (Score:2)
Oh, yeah? Then explain Armageddon to me.
But seriously, folks...
What 'consumer rights'? Who's got the right to see Titanic? What about the right not to see it? More importantly, the right not to hear Celine Dion singing that godawful song?
It could prove interesting, though. If it's is deemed acceptable, will people be allowed, for example, add their own scenes? Change the order of scenes? Imagine if someone were to take a copy of Star Wars and delete the second or so where Greedo pulls a gun. It'd completely change the character of Han Solo.
Re:Art? Pah. (Score:2)
I wonder how many people will get it?
Re:Art? Pah. (Score:2)
The Han Solo Thing? (Score:2)
In the original release (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The Han Solo Thing? (Score:2)
I think that's the story...
Re:The Han Solo Thing? (Score:2)
In the "new and improved" version, Greedo shoots first, inexplicably missing a sitting Han from about 3 feet (some bounty hunter!) and then gets whacked. Allegedly, that makes Han more of a good guy. In my book, that makes Han a slow fool, Greedo a lousy shot and George Lucas an idiot.
Re:Art? Pah. (Score:2, Funny)
I wonder how many people will get it?
Hmmm...in a few months, people won't get it, 'cuz they'll have seen only the edited, re-release of the film, where Greedo pulls out ... a walkie-talkie!
But it's okay, folks, 'cuz Han Solo has already pulled out his own walkie-talkie under the table, and he quickly ... uhhhh ... irradiates Greedo's genitals with a high-power RF burst?
Hrm. (Score:2)
If I buy it's mine (Score:4, Insightful)
What I've seen a lot of people do for movies is to buy it as is, and then either have someone personally edit out portions they don't like or just have some sort of electronic filter that has a set of edit points stored in memory. I frankly don't see how content providers are going to be able to stop this.
Re:If I buy it's mine (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:If I buy it's mine (Score:4, Informative)
For your own personal use does not include renting it out to other people. And while setting up specific edit-points may very well pass court scrutiny (because it's adding what effectively amounts to "opinion"), this isn't what the stores are doing.
You people had better be upset about this, because if somehow this altered-redistribution is somehow established as legal - it's bye bye GPL.
Just like a large (Score:3, Interesting)
sheesh.
Of course, if DVD technology was left to engineers, we would probably have the ability to do this on the fly with dvds.
Moral Rights (Score:5, Insightful)
The idea being that once a piece of art has been created the author has his/her name attached to it, and thus any treatments of the work done later that do not fit the artist's vision taints the artist's reputation.
I don't know how this works with film, because there are limitations to this when an artists produces work for an employer.. so it may be that the studio owns the moral rights, and I'm also not sure how this works in the US, but the UK and Canada both have moral rights. I'm not entirely sure as IANAL.
But.. here is a link for my karma-whore points... Moral Rights [intellectu...rty.gov.uk].
Re:Moral Rights (Score:2)
Re:Moral Rights (Score:3, Informative)
When someone buys the copyright itself, then they're allowed to do all of the above, plus distribute copies.
Re:Moral Rights (Score:5, Informative)
Copyright law is extremely complex. Making blanket statements about it is not recommended. I'm holding its text as of September 1996 and it's a 170-page book.
17 USC 106A: [cornell.edu]
(Boldface added.)
Re:Moral Rights (Score:3, Informative)
In other words, if I paint a painting and sell you both the original and its copyright, you can make prints of it and sell them. But you cannot legally destroy or deface my original. I retain that right, and it is not transferred to you as part of an ordinary copyright sale.
This is a weakened version of droit moral as enshrined in most European copyright law. (At least last I heard -- I don't know what's up with the EU recently.) In France, for example, an artist cannot give away the right to deface or destroy an original work of art, even by explicit contract.
Moral Rights, weak in US. (Score:4, Informative)
European law has broad "moral right", but U.S. law does is much narrower. This is probably good. It gets rid of the argument that removing commercials violates the moral right of the corporate author of the derived work of a TV broadcast.
Eroding our rights? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Eroding our rights? (Score:2)
Re:Eroding our rights? (Score:4, Insightful)
If I buy a print of the Mona Lisa, do I have the right to draw on it? Yes, I do.
The idiot is the guy who thinks that Leonardo's artistic vision trumps my consumer rights.
Re:Eroding our rights? (Score:3, Insightful)
BTW, your argument is bad because the Mona Lisa is one of a kind. I promise you, if you bought all the famous American paintings and burned them 'because its your consumer rights', you'd have to deal with the rights of art lovers around the world to live in a society that preserves its culture. I can assure you that you have no rights when it comes to pissing on original and important pieces of cultural work. I dont know what the gory details are, but I think you'll find that you are not permitted to piss on your culture, even if you own it. (Could be wrong, but shouldn't be.)
Now, if you have copy #2342032 of the latest blockbuster, can you draw on it? Of course you can. The problem is simply the aggregated editing houses that will make it so 'easy' for the culture to censor their own culture that the censored works of its famed artsits become more popular and widespread than the original artistic vision. (For instance, if somebody drew a mustache on Mona Lisa prints, and sold those, you could raise an entire generation of folks who threw out what was good about the Mona Lisa because Leonardo's mustache drawing abilities were clearly sub-par.)
It's a slipperly slope. There really isn't that much difference in 'editing' something and 'completetly editing it out of existance' a la book bonfire. When you begin to aggregate censorship in large amounts, it doesn't matter if its a private body or a public body that does the censoring - it still breaks the crucial cycle of communication required between populus and the artistic community required to inspire creativity and lateral thinking in the non-art world.
To summarize, editing your 'print' of something should be legal and dandy, although probably should be discouraged by the social body in question in order to prevent a slide down that slope. Meanwhile, editing originals is very much a different thing, as cultural works of importantce are shared among a society by virtue of being culturally significant in the first place. I believe this falls into the basket of the 'general will' contract one makes with a society by choosing to participate in it.
same old copyright ownership issue (Score:3, Interesting)
If you bought 10,000 prints of the Mona Lisa, drew a mustache on all of them, and then resold them, The Louvre (or whoever owns the image rights to the Mona Lisa) would have a cease and desist in your face ASAP.
If you secured rights to edit the Mona Lisa and then sell it before you sold it, then you would be legal.
Same thing with movies. I can edit my own tape of Fight Club, but someone can't sell me an edited tape without Fincher's (or Fincher's production company's) permission.
Slashdot ought to be called News For Copyright Law Geeks. Stuff That Used To Matter.
Re:Eroding our rights? (Score:3, Interesting)
Then he died, and it turned out he wanted to be cremated, along with the paintings! That stirred up quite a bit of outrage, since the paintings are, naturally, priceless.
Obviously, this is a different situation from the /. article, since an original artwork is irreplaceable. Actually, I'm not sure why there's no comparable type of object in film, or music for that matter.... Why doesn't the master print (or whatever) of a film have value comparable to an original painting?
Re:Eroding our rights? (Score:2)
Ever watched Robocop on network TV? How about Ferris Bueller's Day Off? Both have dubbed in lines that are so funny that it is worth watching the edited version.
Beyond that, how are these people harming you? What is it about them that has you all hot and bothered?
If you think about it, they have given up asking Hollywood to tone down the content of movies. Instead they have taken matters into their own hands. Since they have given up on Hollywood you no longer have to worry about them pressuring the studios to remove your precious swear words. So you get movies with extra filth due to these people! You should thank them!
Simple answer (Score:3, Insightful)
That was one of the promises of DVD, we were supposed to have multiple ratings at our fingertips so the kids could see the PG version, the teens could see PG-13 and after the children were tucked in, the adults could see the R version.
That hasn't happened. They apparently don't see a market for it. Well if they don't and some consumers do, why the hell shouldn't they be allowed to pursue it?
All these whiney directors need to do is release an editted version themselves. Or are they going to prevent parents from fast-forwarding that one "bad scene" or muting an expletive-laden tirade?
I don't care how "important" the message in Schindler's List is. The scene where there is a nude woman in the German officer's bed is stimulating and sexual. If I had kids, I would want to skip that scene.
Here's what makes me want to puke on these directors...there are a lot of good good movies out there that had to add a single vile scene so they would be able to get the R rating their marketting folks said would sell better. Wasn't that compromising your artistic integrity?
- JoeShmoe
.
Re:Simple answer (Score:5, Insightful)
So... let me get this straight. You're cool with the scenes that depict horrible acts of cruelty and murder, but a scene which is "stimulating" and "sexual" has got to go? There is seriously something wrong with your outlook on life.
For the record, I wouldn't want to cut anything out of Schindler's List -- it's so powerful and effective as it is.
Re:Simple answer (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a big, big difference in the intent of scenes that depict horrible acts of cruelty and the scene I am talking about. This may be difficult for you to understand but there is even a big, big difference in the intent of other scenes that depict full frontal nudity.
When the soldiers shoot the old one-armed man, that is a horrible act. It is shocking. I don't think young children should see that scene. But then, I don't think young children need to even know about the Holocaust so they can enjoy their damn childhood.
But when they get into junior high school and/or high school and start studying World War II, I think Schindler's List is appropriate and the scene where the old-man is shot, for all it's horror, is not gratuitous. I'm sure it happened all the time. The part where the German officer is shooting randomly at Jews is also not gratuitous. The part where hundreds of people are running around naked is not gratuitous. That's how the inspections happened, and I don't see any problem with my kids seeing that. It's not a sexual message, it's the horrible truth.
But why the behind-the-scenes look at the German officer's sex life? Why do we care that he has a hot topless mistress? What is the point of that? There is none. You know how I know that? Back in 1996 or 1997, they showed Shindler's List on television for the first time, commercial free (sponsored by Chevy maybe?) and almost completely uneditted. You know the only edit they made to that film? A floating fuzz-spot to obscure the nipple of the girl in the scene I am describing. Spielburg himself gave a speach before the airing of the movie talking about the importance of showing the whole truth and horror of the Holocaust. So then why this edit? Because I think that the network (NBC I think?) and Speilburg knew that this scene was gratuitous and had nothing to do with the Holocaust.
Later in the movie, the same German officer (I am too lazy to look up his name, forgive me) confronts the Jewish servant girl in a scene that has a lot of wet-shirts and sexual elements. I don't think it's hypocritical that this scene also doesn't bother me. I'm pretty sure there were a lot of German officers that took advantage of their helpless female Jewish servants. It also is critical in understanding why he ultimately lets Schindler rescue her.
So, I stand by my comments. As a parent, I have a right to choose what messages my children see. "German officers get laid a lot by hot German mistresses" just isn't a message I feel important enough to pass on in light of the other serious and important messages in that film.
- JoeShmoe
.
Re:Simple answer (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't take this the wrong way.. I'm all for parents right to show what they want to their own children.. but I feel most adults view on children and sexuality is ridiculuous.
Who came up with the idea that children are totally non-sexual beings that need to be protected from anything remotely sexual? The truth is that children DO have a form of sexuality, and the ones that are actually uncomfortable with sexuality and children in the same sentence is adults.
This does not mean that I would show porn to my children, or extremely sexual movies, but I think the generic american and european view of children and sexuality is screwed up, and probably does more harm than good to kids. No kid takes any harm from seeing a naked body.
According to my definitions of things... (Score:2, Insightful)
"Own it on DVD" is then a misnomer? (Score:2)
Secondly - once I have given YOU the money - it IS mine - so if i want to paint the screen with white out, that's my business. With paint or with another device if i so choose.
I can see the DGA being upset with organized resale of modified DVD's and tapes - but once i buy it, i can - and will - do whatever the hell I want with it.... including burning it, using it as a doorstop, changing it, backing it up.
ahhhh (Score:2)
TIMMY!
What? Watch TV? (Score:2)
Good luck to these guys.
-- Bob
Re:What? Watch TV? (Score:2)
Seriously. Last night I spent over half an hour watching the Playboy channel before realizing it was actually Cinemax.
Found thru google: (Score:2)
"Own It Now!" (Score:2)
Every DVD case that I own has small print that tells me that the movie is for home entertainment only. But there's no fine print that says that I can't edit it.
For what it's worth, it seems to me that this is pretty much a non-issue, though. I mean, the parking lot in front of our local Clean Flicks store has *maybe* a tenth of the traffic as the Hollywood Video store across the street. And as big a chain as Albertsons is, I don't exactly see throngs of people in the store trying to rent videos.
I guess that if the people who own the creative rights to the movies really want to make sure that they retain control of the content, they ought to convince the distributors to include some sort of licensing statement. Lovely, right? Now I'll have an EULA for my movies, too.
-h-
Well, I understand thier feelings... (Score:4, Insightful)
Again, it's not the same as the TV or plane version, because the goal here is not to open the movie for a wider audience (who can then go and see the real thing), it's a viewer asking someone else to protect them permenatly from the scenes that often make the movie.
But I guess I am sort of a sadist when it comes to these things, and prefer movies that make me uncomfortable and show raw humanity at it's best and worst. Also, note that if you think Stanley's, David's, or Quentin's work sucks, pick another director - the point still stands.
Re:Well, I understand thier feelings... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Well, I understand thier feelings... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Well, I understand thier feelings... (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't really see a problem. (Score:2, Interesting)
If the original is still available... (Score:2)
This is exactly like (Score:4, Insightful)
The owner of the rights to the film can do with it what he choses. Simple.
Turner owned those reels of movies and he did what he wanted. Of course the public backlash stopped it in the end.
Similarly local distributors in a country count as the owner's proxy in those states. But the general dislike of dubbing has stopped them from releasing dubbed versions of Crouching Tiger and Life is Beautiful. Of course it has also limited the distribution of foreign movies (the assumption being people don't like dubbing but only film critics like to read subtitles so you can only release it in art houses).
Like an earlier poster said, anyone who doesn't own rights to a movie but works on it is just an employee.
A good example is Fox owning the original Star Wars. Lucas had to buy it back from them. Of course when he did he added in "Greedo shooting first."
Originally Fox could have stopped him from adding it. Later they couldn't. Neither could the LucasFilm employees or Harrison Ford.
Control of the final product is one of the benefits of being a big time director.
I think this battle was lost over colorization (Score:3, Insightful)
sPh
Give consumers what they want! (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a large enough market here to justify the additional cost. There are a variety of companies in Utah that have sprung up to fill this need. The company in question has found people all over the country that want to see cleaned up movies. If Hollywood would simply provide the toned down versions that they have already made of these movies on DVD they could realize additional revenue.
This is not censorship. Censorship is when someone else decides what you get to watch. This is consumers deciding for themselves that they don't want to view particular content. I doubt that many /.ers can respect that, but they should be able to see the difference.
Certainly if I buy a book I am free to rip out any pages that I want. The magic of DVDs allows you to "rip out pages" without doing so permanently. Why hasn't this technology been supported by Hollywood?
Re:Give consumers what they want! (Score:3, Insightful)
Because it hurts their revenue model. Look at this shit they're pulling with the LOTR DVD. A version went on sale yesterday, then there's going to be another "collector's" version in a few months, and then around the holidays the five-disc, king-of-all-collector's-editions edition comes out. And you know there are people that will buy all three.
Why should the studios stuff differently-rated versions onto one disc when they know they can sell multiple versions on different discs and sucker a decent number of people into buying both?
~Philly
Re:Give consumers what they want! (Score:3, Funny)
"Yes..."
"O-L-S-E-N?"
"Yes...."
"B-I
"Yes....."
"Yes, well, we do have that, as a matter of fact...."
"The expurgated version....
"I'm sorry, I didn't quite catch that...?"
"The expurgated version.
"The EXPURGATED version of 'Olsen's Standard Book of British Birds'?!"
"The one without the gannet!"
"The one without the gannet--?! They've ALL got the gannet! It's a Standard British Bird, the gannet, it's in all the books!!!"
"Well, I don't like them...they wet their nests."
"All right! I'll remove it!! (rrrip!) Any other birds you don't like?!
"I don't like the robin..."
"The robin! Right! The robin! (rrrip!) There you are, any others you don't like, any others?"
"The nuthatch?"
"Right! The nuthatch, the nuthatch, the nuthatch, 'ere we are! (rrriiip!) There you are! NO gannets, NO robins, NO nuthatches, THERE's your book!"
"I can't buy that! It's torn!"
Note to posters (Score:2)
It is not about the right of the consumer to edit films.
It is about the right of the director to have some control over the final edit of films to avoid butchered versions of his vision.
So posts about The Phantom Edit are off topic.
If I buy a book (Score:2)
The same with anything. If I buy a Leonardo Davinci's Madonna for X millions of dollars, I can then freaking burn for all I care - but this is a more questionable deed since we agree there is only ONE Madonna, even though we can make copies of it.
However, when I buy a DVD I cannot make extracts of it? What if I want to use it for some critics class or for the sake of making a parody? What if I just want to copy a portion of this DVD to a tape and only watch that portion of the movie later because that is the only portion of the movie that I like and that is the only reason why I bought the freaking DVD on the first place?
I do not know much about Utah and why they do not like nude scenes in Titanic (mormons live there, don't they?) but I believe they have all rights to do as they will with their copies of DVD and if there is a company that helps them to custrate that DVD and make a different version of that DVD for their OWN use, then screw MPAA and all their lawyers, let them try and enforce it. If this is enforcable then noone should be able to take a newspaper apart and only read portions of it.
Re:If I buy a book (Score:2)
correction: If I did that to a book and someone still wanted to buy it from me, I can and will resell it. However I cannot legaly make copies of material in the book (all of it or parts of it) and sell the copies.
Edited for Television (Score:2)
In the UK, they cut everything, including Star Trek (removing references to the IRA for example) and they do not state before a film or show is aired that they have made cuts.
This amounts to false advertising. If they advertise that a film is to be shown, this means the film as released by the studio / director. If any edits have been made, then this is NOT the same film, but a corrupted version, and it should be clearly marked as such.
If people in the UK knew just how many cuts were made to TV broadcasts of films and shows (by a simple "edited for television" at the beginning) they would be outraged.
Well (Score:2)
It's totally understandable that the artists in question would fight to ensure that their vision remains unedited for two reasons:
1) Control over product. It's understantable in an artistic medium - its not like a car, where if you can make the product go faster, after-market, good for you. Art is a message (even if its an uncomplicated, shallow message), and to fuck with it is to fuck with the message.
2) Money. If I'm artist X, and I think most people who are seeing my work through word-of-mouth are seeing edited copies, I'd be upset that other people's editing of my product could be influencing potential customers' decision to purchase my movie. (After all, it's not too uncommon to hear somebody say things like, "Yeah, the movie sucked, but I own it cause of that scene where that chicks not wearing anything." or whatever. Sometimes the offensive bits sell the product.")
That being said, since people have always been free to splice VHS cassettes themselves, etc, I really think its a battle that should be fought only to present the issues directors have with it. I really do believe its unethical to edit art yourself, beyond editing that must take place for logistical reasons ('narrowed for TV' is a legit reason, 'took out bad language' is legit if it doesn't impact the artistic message).
I remain steadfast in my opinion that those who wish to edit their art should grin 'n bare the 'bad stuff', or look for new art altogether.
Unbelievable Quote (Score:3, Insightful)
Who the hell is this guy to determine what should and should not be in a particular movie? I'd hate to see his version of Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut -- it'd be about half an hour long.
It's bad enough already that anything anyone could possibly consider objectionable gets cut out for TV broadcast. I'm sure this guy would love it if Walmart decided to start selling only his censored versions of movies in their stores, to avoid the inevitable objections of several random parents.
Some Things Just Aren't. (Score:2)
I am sick and tired of parents not taking good responsibility for their kids. You know what? Some movies are not meant for kids to watch. PERIOD. If you can't "get over" that fact, mommy, daddy, then learn to deal with the consequences.
I'm also tired of parents thinking that their children are naive. Where did this idea come in? That your children are virgin, clean, pure, and haven't ever heard the word, "fuck", at the age of 9? Like hell.
I watched lots of movies with questionable content when I was a kid. I didn't see a lot because my parents objected to them, so I didn't see them at all, not some farked up edited piece of dung. I had to wait till I was of a maturity level high enough to handle it properly. I was constantly reminded by my parents that, "This is not acceptable in our house or in public, no matter what the movies say." I understood, I followed.
Learn to be a good parent and quit blaming the depravity of society on the artists.
I can see it now... (Score:2)
Opening credits roll...
Flash of light, Samuel L. Jackson says "Hey, you..."
Closing credits roll...
As a filmmaker and a programmer... (Score:2, Insightful)
But Coolidge and other filmmakers argue the films are the creative property of the filmmakers and cannot be altered without permission. A person who is troubled by the content of a film should simply not watch it. Censoring it even temporarily is not an option, she argues. "We are talking about a technology that obliterates the intention of a movie. Parents can control what their child sees by not allowing it in the house."
Here's an analogy for those of you who aren't as familiar with filmmaking. Suppose you develop a schnazzy new algorithm for sorting through your company's client database. You toil over this thing for months until you've tweaked it to the point that it will not run any faster. You go to lunch, celebrating the fact that the method is a good as it can be. When you get back from lunch, you find that the asshole intern the company hired has taken your code out of CVS, changed the display parameters, and made it look like it ran a few millis faster. Now he looks like a god and you look like the asshole.
Films are not things that spring up overnight. Essentially, from a director's view, these "editors" are amateurs who are detracting from the movie's message. Whether that message is "Elizabeth Berkley can't act, but she CAN be nude," or "Tom Hanks is a fine father and hitman." is completely irrelevant. Choosing one movie to edit and not another hurts ALL films.
What's the problem (Score:2)
What about music? (Score:2)
I guess only when it involves sales, it's an issue with the record companies.
Perhaps movie companies don't care as much about editing movies for retailers because they usually premiere and make the big money in theaters?
From the article: (Score:4, Funny)
The other levels are:
* Natalie Portman Nip-ons
* Glaring Technical Inaccuracies
* Scene Contains Scott Baio
* Bad 80's Haircuts
Where does one draw the line? (Score:2)
From the consumer point of view, it seems perfectly reasonable that whoever buys a DVD has the right to use the remote to skip or repeat parts, slow down, pause for bathroom breaks, and so on. There is nothing very different with the purchaser blocking out parts. From there it's a small step to a re-edit, possibly even re-arranging bits and pieces, maybe adding some explanatory material. Now it's pretty obviously not the original. But is that wrong if only the purchaser watches it? How about immediate family? Suppose friends and neighbors watch it during a party?
Now suppose the purchaser knows what scenes to block out, but doesn't know hot to do it, and hires someone to do it. Is that immoral? What if someone else comes in and asks for the same edits. Is that immoral? Suppose someone has a reputation for good edits, is it wrong to simply get copies of all those edited DVDs without knowing in advance exactly what they are; a subscription service?
Where does one draw the line?
Copyright upholds the original creator... (Score:3, Insightful)
It would certainly be a violation of copyright law to buy a movie, edit it, and resell it without telling the new owner.
It is not illegal to resell books and films so long as you dont make copies. I can resell my copy of WIN95, Neuromancer, or Apocalypse Now. This is legal.
As I write this I realize that, though I find censorship abhorrent, and though I believe it has no place in state sponsored schools, education, and libraries, I dont see how offering edited films for private viewing can possibly be in violation of copyright laws.
The copyright holder has been paid for the license to own a copy of the work. If I take the work to an editor and request that thus-and-so changes be made to it I can expect to be charged a fee, and he will make those edits.
Now, if he has a bunch of them already (because it is a popular edit) and trades tapes with me, then charges me the difference for his work the same transaction has happened. I have purchased a license, I still have my one copy, with my after market changes. In theory the editor can return the original to the store and recoup the cost of the license.
But can the editor purchase them in bulk, edit them, and resell them, eliminating the need for the trading of tape? Now he becomes an unauthorized distributor of licenses to that copyright. This would seem to be the only real legal grounds that the studios have.
As for the rest of the techniques, it is really no ones business what I put in line between my DVD player and my TV. I still think censorship sucks, but it is plainly obvious that it is a person's right to handle their property as they see fit.
Time for the one true bible (Score:4, Insightful)
What's next? No more speed reading books? No more looking at art without an art degree? No more adjusting the bass on my CD player? No more choice of browser resolution? Police making sure I use exactly two quarts of water in my cool aid?
Some people need to get over themselves.
Blockbuster (Score:3, Interesting)
So who is getting fucked?
The corporation (Blockbuster) has decided to impose it's own moral code of ethics, but since they are the only game in town (unless you want to drive an hour to the nearest city), you don't have a choice but live under their ethical standards.
Do you get fucked because you have less choice?
Or does the corporation get fucked because they are being told they can't alter a movie?
So it's a lose-lose for the consumer: either Blockbuster wins or the MPAA wins.
What a fun time to be alive! 1/3 of the planet's population is starving and we're worried about our rights to see softcore porn. Not that I think we should have to do something about those billions of starving people -- I just think it is fascinating.
Stop and think, please (Score:4, Insightful)
Third-parties are editing creative works that are not their own to meet their particular standards. They want to screen out tits, Jar-Jar, whatever. The argument that seems to be pretty popular here is that "we bought, we can do what we want with it." This is true, to a point. If I want to watch my own 30-minute version of Eyes Wide Shut that's my own business.
Where it gets complicated is that people are making that edit and then selling it. Even if it's marked, under what right are they doing this? They didn't create it. Like it or not, a film is a work of art. The entire film is an expression of the artistic vision of the creator. To alter it is to alter the message, which does a gross disservice to the creator.
What would Lolita be without a 14-year old girl (never mind that she was 12 in the book)? Clockwork Orange sans violence. Armageddon with no asteroid?
A film is not just some montage of scenes pieced together for you viewing. It has a point, maybe a moral--it's going somewhere. At the very least it is telling a story that has certain nuances.
My point is simple: the art is being altered and then being sold. Even if it's marked as edited, it's being sold under the original title. Let's say that Titanic is edited to remove the lovemaking between Winslet and DiCaprio? Is it still a James Cameron film? Hard to say, really, because you aren't seeing what he intended. Think about that, for a second. Consumer rights this, consumer rights that--what about artistic rights?
~Chazzf
Re:LOL (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:LOL (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:LOL (Score:2)
It's only when they resell edited movies that I would cry foul.
This is an interesting issue, to be sure
Re:LOL (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What if some one was... (Score:2)
They are purchasing the movies at full price, editing them, and adding a small cost for the editing price. Your example assumes that you give nothing to the copyright owner and get profit in return. These companies are paying the copyright owner the full amount for each movie.
It is the same as an airline or TV station handing a movie to an editor, then sticking an 'Edited for content' label at the beginning of the show.
Re:Parents like it (Score:2)
Well, I'm opposed to all forms of censorship, but I understand that they want to keep their self-dellusioned outlook.
Of course, the reason that I am opposed to censorship is that it is a form of thought controll enforced by small-minded "moral" people.
I would agree with "edited" movies if the original versions were free of the evil influence of the MPAA's censorship: in other words, let uschoose for ourselves dammit!
Re:Parents like it (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Copyright issue. (Score:2)
I personally think the artistic integrity of the director (yes, I do consider a small percentage of films today art) is very important whether it is derivative or not. Also, I dislike censorship. I live in Canada, and they show movies unedited with swearing and nudity (for example, The People Versus Larry Flynt (funny movie, but I do not consider it art)). I don't think that any movie should be censored at all. If you want to show something on tv, either show it from beginning to end unedited or show nothing at all. It is quite pathetic to watch channels like TBS (from the US) that have the runtimes reduced by 20 minutes on movies because of cut scenes.