Stats:
For the week ending 23rd August 2009, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 7.89% vs 92.11%
Blu-ray sales down 15.81% compared to last week, total spending: $13.26 million
DVD sales up 19.24% compared to last week, total spending: $154.87 million
You can read the latest digital edition of HMM (August 31 Issue) with the above stats here:
Top 10:
Hannah Montana: The Movie was the top title for the week, comfortably beating the second place The Last House on the Left. Last week's top title, I Love You, Man, dropped to third place.
Other new releases in the top 10 this week include the TV Blu-ray titles Dexter: Season 3 and Sons of Anarchy: Season 1, at 5th and 8th respectively. True Blood: Season 1, although not a new release, was 9th.
The rest of the top 10 were titles released in the past few weeks, including Watchmen which is still going strong at 4th. Fast & Furious, Coraline and 17 Again round off the list at 6th, 7th and 10th.
Market Share:
Watchmen was this week's top Blu-ray title in terms of market share, getting a strong 33.68%, practically double that your typical Blu-ray new release - it's not bad after nearly a month after its original release. Discount probably accounted for True Blood hitting the top 10 charts again, it was second place with 26.49%. In a blog I wrote recently, I discussed the relative value of various forms of digital entertainment, including Blu-ray TV boxsets, which represent very good value for money, even better value than your typical DVD movie based on an analysis on price versus the number of minutes of entertainment you get. For the other TV on Blu-ray titles, they did less well. Sons of Anarchy: Season One got a respectable 12.92%, but Dexter: Season Three only managed 7.4%. My blog also mentioned that TV on DVD was even better value than TV on Blu-ray, and it seems some other people agree as well.
Hannah Montana: The Movie wasn't on the list because it came in Disney's now common Blu-ray + DVD combo sets, which makes it hard to report on market share figures without it heavily distorted towards DVD (in fact, counting the BD+DVD combo, there are actually 3 DVD editions of the movie, as opposed to just a single Blu-ray version, that also came with the DVD version). The Last House on the Left didn't suffer from this, but it only had 13.39% market share. Couple this relatively low market share figure, and the fact that it was the second best selling Blu-ray title of the week, it suggests that the DVD version did huge business which then added to the Hannah Montana figures, meant a good week for DVD (which saw a 19% jump in sales compared to last week, compared to a 15% drop for Blu-ray).
The recently released hit titles like Fast & Furious, Taken, Gran Torino, Push, Knowing ... continue to do well on Blu-ray as compared to on DVD, despite not selling as well on either format anymore.
The complete Top 20 best sellers and Blu-ray market share tables can be seen here:
For the week ending 23rd August 2009, here are the stats:
Percentage of revenue:
Blu-ray vs DVD: 7.89% vs 92.11%
Blu-ray sales down 15.81% compared to last week, total spending: $13.26 million
DVD sales up 19.24% compared to last week, total spending: $154.87 million
You can read the latest digital edition of HMM (August 31 Issue) with the above stats here:
Top 10:
Hannah Montana: The Movie was the top title for the week, comfortably beating the second place The Last House on the Left. Last week's top title, I Love You, Man, dropped to third place.
Other new releases in the top 10 this week include the TV Blu-ray titles Dexter: Season 3 and Sons of Anarchy: Season 1, at 5th and 8th respectively. True Blood: Season 1, although not a new release, was 9th.
The rest of the top 10 were titles released in the past few weeks, including Watchmen which is still going strong at 4th. Fast & Furious, Coraline and 17 Again round off the list at 6th, 7th and 10th.
Market Share:
Watchmen was this week's top Blu-ray title in terms of market share, getting a strong 33.68%, practically double that your typical Blu-ray new release - it's not bad after nearly a month after its original release. Discount probably accounted for True Blood hitting the top 10 charts again, it was second place with 26.49%. In a blog I wrote recently, I discussed the relative value of various forms of digital entertainment, including Blu-ray TV boxsets, which represent very good value for money, even better value than your typical DVD movie based on an analysis on price versus the number of minutes of entertainment you get. For the other TV on Blu-ray titles, they did less well. Sons of Anarchy: Season One got a respectable 12.92%, but Dexter: Season Three only managed 7.4%. My blog also mentioned that TV on DVD was even better value than TV on Blu-ray, and it seems some other people agree as well.
Hannah Montana: The Movie wasn't on the list because it came in Disney's now common Blu-ray + DVD combo sets, which makes it hard to report on market share figures without it heavily distorted towards DVD (in fact, counting the BD+DVD combo, there are actually 3 DVD editions of the movie, as opposed to just a single Blu-ray version, that also came with the DVD version). The Last House on the Left didn't suffer from this, but it only had 13.39% market share. Couple this relatively low market share figure, and the fact that it was the second best selling Blu-ray title of the week, it suggests that the DVD version did huge business which then added to the Hannah Montana figures, meant a good week for DVD (which saw a 19% jump in sales compared to last week, compared to a 15% drop for Blu-ray).
The recently released hit titles like Fast & Furious, Taken, Gran Torino, Push, Knowing ... continue to do well on Blu-ray as compared to on DVD, despite not selling as well on either format anymore.
The complete Top 20 best sellers and Blu-ray market share tables can be seen here:
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