According to Torrent Freak, the most pirated movie of 2009 was J. J. Abrams's Star Trek. Transformers 2 was closely behind.
However, Star Trek also represented this year's biggest hit on home video, selling in record numbers on Blu-ray, beating last year's The Dark Knight as the best selling Blu-ray title in the first week of release. Transformers 2 also managed to do extremely well on Blu-ray and DVD. And with neither film doing that badly at the box office, the link between piracy and lost revenue needs further examination.
The year's most high profile piracy case was for the movie X-Men Origins: Wolverine, where the pirated version was leaked onto the Internet a whole month before the theatrical debut. But even that did not stop its run at the box office.
So is piracy actually helping movies? I would say yes and no. Piracy is really just another facet of communication on the Internet. It gets people talking about movies, and if the movies are good, many will then fork out money to watch it at the cinemas or on DVD and Blu-ray. If it is bad, then through twitter and other communication mediums, the word now spreads fast, and it's very likely that those who are still curious about the movie will watch it in pirated form rather than pay for it. So piracy may help good movies, but will definitely hurt bad movies.
The fact of the matter is that watching a movie at the cinema is an experience that you cannot pirate. Especially now with 3D presentations. On home video, pirated version do get close to real releases in terms of quality sometimes, and that may be hurting DVD sales, but Blu-ray sales are standing firm as the requirements to get Blu-ray quality pirated copies are out of reach for most people (fast connection, high bandwidth allowance, amble storage and playback devices to TV). But DVD sales are being hurt more by the increased demand for rentals (both digital and physical), analysts say that's because of the poor economy, and so whether piracy has a large role in this is debatable.
Studios should fight against piracy, but it's all a matter of how they do it. They can go all out to try and stop the source and punish those who download, or they can give people less reasons to pirate movies, and more reasons to pay for it. 3D presentations are a step in the right direction, as is the superior quality in Blu-ray and the inclusion of DVD/Digital Copy combos, and the eventual introduction of Managed Copy should further help matters.
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However, Star Trek also represented this year's biggest hit on home video, selling in record numbers on Blu-ray, beating last year's The Dark Knight as the best selling Blu-ray title in the first week of release. Transformers 2 also managed to do extremely well on Blu-ray and DVD. And with neither film doing that badly at the box office, the link between piracy and lost revenue needs further examination.
The year's most high profile piracy case was for the movie X-Men Origins: Wolverine, where the pirated version was leaked onto the Internet a whole month before the theatrical debut. But even that did not stop its run at the box office.
So is piracy actually helping movies? I would say yes and no. Piracy is really just another facet of communication on the Internet. It gets people talking about movies, and if the movies are good, many will then fork out money to watch it at the cinemas or on DVD and Blu-ray. If it is bad, then through twitter and other communication mediums, the word now spreads fast, and it's very likely that those who are still curious about the movie will watch it in pirated form rather than pay for it. So piracy may help good movies, but will definitely hurt bad movies.
The fact of the matter is that watching a movie at the cinema is an experience that you cannot pirate. Especially now with 3D presentations. On home video, pirated version do get close to real releases in terms of quality sometimes, and that may be hurting DVD sales, but Blu-ray sales are standing firm as the requirements to get Blu-ray quality pirated copies are out of reach for most people (fast connection, high bandwidth allowance, amble storage and playback devices to TV). But DVD sales are being hurt more by the increased demand for rentals (both digital and physical), analysts say that's because of the poor economy, and so whether piracy has a large role in this is debatable.
Studios should fight against piracy, but it's all a matter of how they do it. They can go all out to try and stop the source and punish those who download, or they can give people less reasons to pirate movies, and more reasons to pay for it. 3D presentations are a step in the right direction, as is the superior quality in Blu-ray and the inclusion of DVD/Digital Copy combos, and the eventual introduction of Managed Copy should further help matters.
More:
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