Good to see someone besides myself still keeps an eye on the old articles posted here.
As to this whole piracy debacle, I believe the cost of legit HK DVDs has dropped considerably since 1999 when Ryan first posted his complaint. Media Asia in particular were notoriously overpriced in their pricing strategy, with discs fetching upwards of $34.95 to $49.99 Canadian once they reached overseas retail (like here in Canada), while contemporary American releases were already dropping to the $25-$30 range.
I recently posted a rant regarding the piracy issue in response to an article I’d read which detailed the only avenue of retort seemingly left open to the frutstrated members of the Hong Kong film industry like Jackie Chan: smashing fake displays of fake purses to make some kind of feeble “point.”
http://hkmdb.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?t=41877
If you purchase an “original” and pirated DVD, then compare the discs you’ll notice some significant differences. The original DVD usually has twice the number of bytes encoded on it 9GB instead of 4.7GB. If you are a discerning viewer and want to build a true DVD collection, then it would make sense to buy an “original,” otherwise buy a disposable pirated DVD.
A few years ago, I’d have agreed wholeheartedly with this statement, as indeed many pirate DVDs were of an inferior quality, but now I realize that any one person’s experience in this area is entirely based on the country in which they live. As I mentioned in the post linked above, pirate DVDs in China, Hong Kong and Canada, and probably several other countries, are virtually indistinguishable from the originals. By that I mean these discs are PROFESSIONALLY MASTERED using original digital components as well as original sleeve artwork modified to include Chinese lettering and printed on heat-set glossy stock (I work in the printing field and I know quality when I see it). These are not the standard shot-off-a-movie-screen and ripped-on-a-home-computer DVD-Rs or DVD+Rs with crummy little color xerox sleeves; these are fully featured, silver-single-layer or gold-dual-layered discs that mimic the legit versions to a tee. Almost as if to flip the bird to the studios, the pirates are often able to add the ORIGINAL CD SOUNDTRACK onto the DVD as a "hidden" feature, which of course, means even better value for those so inclined.
These DVDs are most likely duplicated using leaked “source materials.” Considering just how many of the world’s DVDs are now manufactured in China, it’s not too much of a stretch to picture some after-hours bootlegging going on, whether it’s in the form of DVD pressing machines stamping out a few extra thousand copies under the radar, or some sneaky dude in the marketing department emailing the sleeve art to a site off the premises, or an underpaid techie making sure his computer is “accessible” to someone who could then download the digital mastering components (the film, soundtracks, extra features, etc.). The American boots are really a sight to see: DTS, anamorphic widescreen, dual-layered DVD-9's, commentaries, extras, multiple soundtracks (including the contents of the official soundtrack CD), glossy printed sleeves and usually a cardboard slip case to protect the disc and eliminate the need for bulky amaray cases to take up space in invariably tiny stores. It's scary when the bootleggers are more progressive-minded than the varous studios they're ripping off.
Don't get me wrong, many of the boots, particularly those of Hong Kong pictures made from basic, low-priced single layer originals, are indeed ripped to DVD-Rs to keep the prices ridiculously low, and the sleeves are indeed your average-quality color photocopy. Even then, I'd imagine the margin on these titles, once the pirates factor in the cost of replication, sleeve copying, and an amaray case, is pretty slim when the discs are selling for a paltry $4 a piece (less if you buy in bulk). Volume sales is where they make their money.
And while this problem may seem like one that only affects a handful of countries with lax or poorly worded copyright laws, you can rest assured that the money the pirates are making right now will allow them to move into trickier markets with ease, once the quality of their work is sampled by more and more people through such services as eBay, which is so rife now with bootleg product as to be a veritable haven black marketeers.
This is all going to get a lot worse for film industries the world over before it gets better. The MPAA and Jackie Chan and marketing people can stage all the protests they want and throw all the media-savvy tantrums they see fit, and the world's law enforcement agencies can stage raid after raid, but it'll be a long time before they can cut all the legs of this spider, especially when new "legs" grow back virtually overnight.
Perhaps the answer lies in adopting a better pricing strategy, as both "sfong 1" and Ryan have mentioned above, but the prices would have to be A LOT lower to successfully drive an expanding bootleg customer base away from pirate goods and back to the legitimate product. But even that is a longshot, since pirate discs here in Canada's Chinese communities now sell for a jawdropping 3/$20 CDN for high-quality American boots, and 5/$20 for Asian boots (Hong Kong, Japanese, Thai). As I mention in the post linked above, a recent high-profile bust of the bootleg industry in Toronto had exactly the opposite effect to the one intended. The customer base in these stores grew so fast and so quickly that MORE stores were opened to handle the flow, and a least one store in a popular Chinese Mall went so far as to hire a CAUCASIAN guy to work the counter so the Chinese store manager wouldn't have to answer so many questions from the influx of gweilos who instantly became regular customers.
I remember years ago, the shining lights of the Hong Kong film industry staging a solidarity March against the organized crime that had long infested their industry (the same organized crime that had made the industry so successful for a good two decades, somewhat ironically). Jackie Chan led the parade. While I'm certain the film people thought they were striking a crippling blow to the underworld leeches who had so long plagued their existence, the truth and the consequences were much uglier: the spectre of dwindling profits in theatrical production and distribution after the 1997 handover, and the burgeoning era of digital media, gave the criminal element a whole new lease on life, and with the later addition of pirated AMERICAN DVDs to their repertoire, a viable and, so far, long-lived source of revenue, and a buttress against the potential death of the Hong Kong film industry, where well-meaning folks like Jackie Chan still think that public service announcements and press-friendly PR "events" will actually make a difference.
They won't.
Something bigger has to take place, maybe something more convergent. Perhaps the film and DVD industries will one day take their cue, or even steal strategies, from the DVD pirates and fight them at street level, the way the music industry was forced to several years ago, as they watched CD sales plummet in the wake of the rise in popularity of on-line swapping. Sure they never stamped out illegal downloads, and in fact the practise has, if anything, grown since then, but at least they figured out a reasonable compromise that allowed them to get a slice of the pie for as little as 99¢ a song. The format would need tweaking for movies and TV shows, but seems inevitable as the only viable option with which media titans can compete, in this case, with deeply rooted organized crime.
If you can't beat 'em....