Skip to main content

Warner Bros. Pledges Exclusivity to Blu-ray

Warner Bros. Pledges Exclusivity to Blu-ray

The post-holiday stalemate in the high-definition format war may just have been broken, with Blu-ray landing a new and powerful ally.  Warner Bros. Studios, a former equal opportunity player – releasing movies in both formats – formally announced on Friday that it would begin releasing movies exclusively on Blu-ray in 2008.

According to Warner, the move was prompted by consumer demand. “Consumers have clearly chosen Blu-ray, and we believe that recognizing this preference is the right step in making this great home entertainment experience accessible to the widest possible audience,” said Kevin Tsujihara, president of Warner Home Video.

Recommended Videos

The never-ending conflict between formats seems to also have been a factor in the decision. Blu-ray, Warner execs believe, possesses more future potential than its competitor. “The window of opportunity for high-definition DVD could be missed if format confusion continues to linger,” said Warner CEO Barry Meyer, in a statement. “We believe that exclusively distributing in Blu-ray will further the potential for mass market success and ultimately benefit retailers, producers, and most importantly, consumers.”

While the studio will continue to release movies on HD-DVD through the early months of this year, support for the format will end in May 2008, with the studio switching exclusively to standard DVDs and Blu-ray.

In a comment sent via email, Toshiba expressed surprise at Warner Bros. decision, noting "various contracts in place between our companies concerning the support of HD DVD" and its belief HD DVD players and PCs outsold Blu-ray in the U.S. market in 2007. Toshiba has not yet commented on whether it is considering  legal action against Warner Bros., noting only that it is evaluating its next steps.

Warner Bros. defection leaves Paramount, Dreamworks, and Universal among the major studios producing movies exclusively in HD DVD format, while Sony, Disney, Fox, MGM, and Lionsgate number among Blu-ray’s supporters. However, Warner Bros. move to Blu-ray is significant because the studio represents a  signficant share of Hollywood’s overall DVD business, accounting for 18 to 20 percent of the DVD market on its own.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
How to convert your VHS tapes to DVD, Blu-ray, or digital
VHS tape lifestyle DVD burner combo deck

While DVD and Blu-ray dominate today's world, VHS tapes ruled supreme in the '80s and '90s. It wasn't uncommon for families to document birthday parties, holidays, sporting events, and other big moments in life with their handheld camcorder, recording the footage onto a trusty VHS tape. Unfortunately, playing those VHS tapes is challenging nowadays, as it's unlikely that you still have your old VHS player (or that it's even still in working condition).

That means you'll need to look into converting your VHS tapes to DVD, Blu-ray, or digital formats to take a trip down memory lane. Even if you're not interested in checking out the footage today, it makes sense to get the film converted – after all, those VHS tapes are slowly deteriorating, and if they go bad, all that footage will be forever lost.

Read more
You asked: Should you buy a 70-inch TV, do you really need a Blu-ray player, and more?
You Asked Ep 18

In this You Asked: Why buy a more expensive Blu-ray player? Blu-ray players vs. game consoles. Are 70-inch TVs any good? Is all eARC HDMI 2.1, and is all HDMI 2.1 eARC? And will we ever get QD-OLED with MLA?

Are all Blu-ray players the same?

Read more
Warner Bros. Discovery says FAST service will come ‘at the right time’
The Max.com website.

If it seems like basically any company that owns any sort of entertainment content is in the FAST game. (That's free advertising-supported TV.) Fox has Tubi. Paramount has Pluto TV. Amazon has Freevee. (And Freevee has Amazon.) The Roku Channel syndicates a bunch and has its own content. Sling has its own thing.

What about Warner Bros. Discovery? The newly combined service that now serves pretty much the entire entertainment spectrum — from Succession and Game of Thrones to This Came Out of Me and Naked and Afraid — is set to relaunch as Max with a new app on May 23 that looks to give consumers even more content for their monthly subscription fee. (And on a platform that works better than HBO Max ever did, too.) And it's still doing so with a paid tier that includes advertising.

Read more