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$9 to rent an HD movie on demand?

Posted May 16 2008, 01:56 PM by Kim Peterson
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People will pay between $7 and $9 to rent HD movies-on-demand that come out the same day as DVDs, according to consulting firm Oliver Wyman. Right now, movies generally hit DVD first before releasing on-demand. Changing that formula would lead consumers to pay for three more movies a year, the firm said, adding $5 billion to the $50 billion spent on movies annually in the U.S.

Even a $7 rental seems too pricey to me, unless you're talking about some jaw-droppingly amazing movie that absolutely must be watched in high-definition. Despite its slightly outrageous numbers, the report touches on a fact that movie studios have clued into for a while now: video-on-demand is smoking hot, and doesn't deserve its second-tier status.

Time Warner figured that out, and this year is putting all its films on video-on-demand the same day they come out on DVD. The margins from on-demand movies hits 60% to 70%, execs said, compared with 20% to 30% for DVD rentals. "It's very good for the film companies," CEO Jeff Bewkes said during the company's Q1 earnings call.

Comcast's video-on-demand offerings used to be as pathetic as the 99-cent VHS bin at the video store. But its library now stands at 10,000 titles, with an increasing number of movies available the same day as the DVD release. The service gets about 250 million views a month.

So where are the VOD investment opportunities? The list of companies making plays in this business is long, and includes telecom carriers, cable companies and equipment vendors. Motorola and Cisco are deeply invested in the equipment piece of the puzzle. The six largest cable operators have joined forces to make it easier to advertise through VOD. Netflix, Amazon, Blockbuster, TiVo and Apple have introduced or are developing on-demand services.

A third of U.S. homes can access on-demand video, and analysts are making big-money projections for the future of the business. The global VOD market will hit $11.4 billion by 2011, according to the Informa research firm. And though North America will have 27% of the total subscribers, it will contribute 46% of the overall revenue.

 

Comments

 

I did not realize that VOD was that expensive!  My cable company is Cox Communications and their favorite motto is "SOON"...we are still waiting for a good listing of HD channels when compared to Directv...and they are working on the "On Demand" part, but for a year have said "soon" to when it is coming!  To David on an earlier post...I have a cable DVR and record all the PPV movies I buy and any movies I like on HBO or Starz or Cinemax channels so I can make a DVD for my collection.  Are you saying that you cannot do that with VOD?  Or you just need to get a DVR?  Curious.....

This is based on a survey, the actual number of people who will shell out that kind of money will not add up. This is why people download movies off the share sites, so they can watch for free. If they made them reasonably priced more people would pay to watch.

Tivo VOD problem - no closed captioning!!!  Have to have it or I don't "rent".

Bob:  HD on your system is in Lower Quality than a DVD?  I would be finding another system....Are you sure you have an HD tv and an HD receiver?  Both are necessary...not joking with you...had a friend in Illinois who bought a new HD tv and had Dish network but not an HD box...He thought I was joking when I told him he had to upgrade!  He later appologilzed when he upgraded!  The picture on my HD set is outstanding!  I also have HBO and Cinemax and Starz and Showtime in HD and it is like being in a theatre, minus the noise and smells..and mine is an older model 52" but is fantastic.

They are basing these answers on questions asked to people. Surethey SAY they will pay 9.00 but when it comes to actually paying it is a different story. Charging 9.00 to watch a movie is why people download movies from share-sites to watch for free. If these companies would charge a reasonable price they would get more people willing to pay to watch.

I don't think so.. there's no way I'm spending $7-$9 dollars on a hd on-demand movie, especially with the gas prices being so high.  $3.99 well that's ok because instead of driving to wasting gas to go rent movies you can rent them out of your own home... but $2.99 would be even better.  Especially now... since I'm planning to cut all my cable because in reality it's only a luxary and not a necessity, and I can use the money more for fuel than for tv entertainment.  The cable companies better start working on giving customers good deals and offering like free on-deman movies or something if they want to continue keeping their customers because I'm sure I'm not the only individual whose going to cancel because of fuel prices!

7 to 9 dollars for HD Movies on Demand? Wonder how much more money we, the consumer, are going to have to pay? We are suffering at the fuel pump, in our grocery store, in paying our income taxes, anything we do.

I agree with valkire100; for example, on the DVD of Final Destination, you can choose what can happen to the characters in the movie. That sort of example feature can't be done with Video On Demand.

It is not surprising to me to see that Comcast is the most expensive at $9 per VOD.  I would never pay that amount for the movies that are coming out these days.  None of them are worth spending that much money on - whether you prefer to watch them from the comfort of your own home or want to go to a theatre for the "surround" experience.  If I was really excited about any movie these days, I would buy the DVD so that I could watch it again whenever I wanted to.  VOD is a fad now, but when people sit down and figure out the economics of it - it won't last long.  

You must be crazy to pay for outrageous price of VOD, because it doesn't worth it!

A few people have stated you could rent it at Redbox or buy it for few more dollars. 1. Redbox doesn't rent Blu-Ray movies/HD movies. 2. Yes, you could wait a few more weeks and buy it, but they cost about 25.00-35.00. You won't find them for 12.99.

With that being said, I still wouldn't rent them for that much.

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