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TALKBACK

Blockbuster expands Blu-ray but not HD DVD

By Cindy Spielvogel -- Video Business,06/18/2007


Blockbuster will expand its Blu-ray rentals to 1,700 stores.

JUNE 18 | Blockbuster is expanding Blu-ray Disc rentals to 1,700 stores by mid-July, dealing a setback to the rival HD DVD format.

The retailer will continue to offer both Blu-ray and HD DVD through its online rental service and in the 250 locations that have been carrying both formats since November.

The company said it made the decision to expand just Blu-ray because Blu-ray rentals were “significantly outpacing HD DVD rentals at Blockbuster stores.”

The 1,700 stores will offer more than 170 Blu-ray titles and will add more as they are released.

“This is not a format endorsement,” said Matthew Smith, Blockbuster senior VP of merchandising. As to whether the company will continue to roll out either Blu-ray or HD DVD beyond this initiative, “it depends what consumer trends will be,” he said.

The added locations are “in those stores where our research indicates there will be the most demand,” said Smith.

The company hasn’t given up on HD DVD. “Obviously, when customers are ready, we can expand the Blu-ray offering to more stores and add HD DVD to more locations if that’s what customers tell us they want,” Smith said.

Executives from studios that release only in Blu-ray have been saying that retailers will begin favoring Blu-ray over HD DVD. Blockbuster’s announcement is the first official acknowledgement.

Smith acknowledged the high-definition rental market is still “small.” Although he wouldn’t give an exact figure for Blu-ray and HD DVD rentals in Blockbuster stores, he said the percentage of high-def is in the “single digits.”

The percentage of Blu-ray rentals vs. HD DVD in the average store and online is 70% Blu-ray vs. 30% HD DVD, he said.

Sony Pictures Home Entertainment worldwide president David Bishop said the rental split has been in favor of Blu-ray more than the sell-through split. He speculated that is partly because Blockbuster and other rental retailers are drawing in PlayStation 3 users for games, who are then trying out movies.

He predicted more retailers would follow Blockbuster’s move. Sony has been talking to retailers and showing them data that shows Blu-ray sales continue to outpace HD DVD.

“This is really the beginning of the end you’re going to see in the marketplace,” he said of Blockbuster’s announcement.

Bishop said the move should give consumers more confidence in Blu-ray and get more people off the sidelines, who may be waiting until a clear winner emerges.

“We really want the consumer to feel comfortable about making a choice as they move forward,” he said. “This will certainly go a long way to help things.”

Blockbuster rival Netflix is viewing the chain's Blu-ray favoritism in-store as a competitive opportunity.

"It's just another reason for people to rent online," Netflix chief content officer Ted Sarandos said. "We have not seen a clear decision yet [on which format consumers prefer]. We think it would help if more studios would dual publish." 

When asked whether Blockbuster was given any type of financial incentive to expand Blu-ray, Smith said “absolutely not.”

He also said the decision had nothing to do with revenue sharing, although he acknowledged that Blockbuster has revenue-sharing deals on high-definition titles with some studios. He would not divulge specifics regarding studios and terms.

Smith said Blockbuster made the decision because the company felt the time was appropriate to go to the next level for Blu-ray.

“We’ve been looking at 250 stores for five to six months now, and we’ve definitely seen from Blu-ray a significant increase in rentals over a period of time,” he said.

"I think it's a true development," said Mike Dunn, president of  Blu-ray supporter 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, speaking on a panel at the Home Entertainment Summit: DVD and Beyond conference in Los Angeles this week. "Blockbuster is following consumers and showing where the consumer market is growing. It's a big, big milestone."

Other sources agreed that the Blockbuster move is a valuable marketing tool for Blu-ray, though the actual revenue generated will likely be small.

“It’s more publicity than volume impact,” said Alison Casey, with market research firm Understanding & Solutions. Nevertheless, she condeded “there is the perception that there is wider support for Blu-ray.”

“It’s good consumer exposure for the format in stores that people frequent for entertainment,” agreed Steve Nickerson, senior VP of Warner Home Video, which supports both Blu-ray and HD DVD. “If these people are early adopters or not, that’s for someone else to debate.”

Indie supplier Starz Home Entertainment recently decided to release its titles in Blu-ray only, said president Bill Clark at the DVD and Beyond conference. While the penetration of PlayStation 3 and major studio support were the primary factors in the companys decision, Blockbusters move reinforced that stance, he said.

Jennifer Netherby and Susanne Ault contributed

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Submitted by: Ross Massa
7/18/2007 9:56:34 PM PT
Location:San Jose, CA

I strongly disagree with this decision blockbuster is making. I had recently signed up for their blockbuster total access because of their larger HD DVD collection, rather than netflix. I now only rent HD DVDs on line partly because I have no other choice. The blockbuster nearest to my house was shut down. I have an Xbox 360 with the HD DVD attachment and I am very pleased with its performance and low price. In my opinion blue ray is over rated and not to mention over priced. If blue ray wins the fight in North America, Sony will have control over the production of the players, discs, and a large amount of the movies due to their Sony productions. Who benefits in the end ……………… not us but Sony. Europe however seems to be getting it right with the larger selling of HD DVDs. They even have HD movies not available in north America at the moment.

Submitted by: Ross Gadeberg
7/8/2007 1:03:33 PM PT
Location:Glen Ellen, CA
Occupation:Controller

I firmly believe that this is a very smart choice, and I am now going to become a regular Block Buster customer for I own a Sony Blu Ray Player and will never go back to renting Standard Definition DVDs from anyone.

Submitted by: Jacob Wazkowitz
6/22/2007 2:18:48 PM PT
Location:Texas
Occupation:Sales

I do not think this will have any impact on the war. As described in the article Blockbuster has been seeing decline. I am a member of their online services and only rent HD DVD. If they stay true and convert online to this same stance I will be forced to join the competitor. Blu Ray is undoubtly overpriced and overrated. The only true HD priced to own is HD DVD and that alone will make the difference. I am not seeking a PS3 to be my vidoe game console and my movie entertainment. Keep the video game wars on their side. Obvious since Nintendo keeps kicking @$$ each month. Way to go Wii.
The only sad thing about this all is that Universal is the only true film house holding true to this format. (Bless you and I can''''t wait for HEROES on HD DVD. I hope it never sees the light of day on Blu Ray.)
Even Warner should be ashamed of themselves since they were the first advocates to back HD DVD then quickly sell out and start distributing on both formats.
I''''ll stay true to HD DVD and the films that are truly represented by them. Bite me Blu Ray fans. Your time is not coming.

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