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Invelos Forums->General: General Discussion |
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The Mentality of a DVD Collector |
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Registered: August 18, 2007 | Posts: 100 |
| Posted: | | | | After watching countless videos of people on youtube showing off their much loved DVD collections I‘ve began to wonder how the average DVD collector thinks. I’ve come across many who strike me as the type who have reached the point of just buying DVDs for the sake of buying DVDs. I think on some level they have become in a way obsessed with quaintly rather than quality. And others I’ve seen seem to have a more patience and researched approach. They will often wait until a price reduction in particular title they want. And they will buy the edition of the best value in terms of packaging, picture/sound quality and special features, rather than a bare bones first edition release; which is the category I like to think I fall under.
So here are my questions to all you collectors out there. How do you view yourself as a collector?
Do you have a set of personal rules when it comes to purchasing your DVDs?
Buying habits; example, are you patient? Will you buy a new release DVD knowing that a superior edition will be out in the coming months?
Have you changed the way you buy DVDs since you started collecting?
Have you evolved? |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 5,635 |
| Posted: | | | | I've always enjoyed being a collector. As a young boy, I had a rock collection. Over the years, I've had two substantial comic book collections (I taught a 3-unit honors college class for a year and a half, and lectured for history classes and at Comic Con), a good science fiction collection, a small stamp collection, and collections of both Mickey Mouse and Marvin Martian figurines. Working as a radio dj, I had more than 3,000 LPs, and still have 5,000+ CDs. I enjoy the gathering and organizing of things I like. In college, I studied media: television, radio and film. I worked in all three, but had my greatest success as a critic. My college did not offer a degree in film, the closest being either a major in Communications Studies (which was no discipline at all) or a minor in film studies. Most of my film classes were film as literature classes in the English department (the others in Comm. Studies, Humanities, and Art). So I applied them toward my English major.
I want to see great films from all eras. I want to see them when I want to see them, so until the great and the obscure are available on very cheap video on demand, I will buy DVDs and Blu-ray discs. Then I can watch Keaton or The Best Years of Our Lives or Dark Star or Pandora's Box or Have Gun -- Will Travel or whatever at 3 am as I please.
Recently, I have a new way of buying DVDs. I now officially hate going to movie theaters. So if there's a film I'm interested in (or my wife or my daughter is), we wait for the DVD and buy it and watch it. If it's good, we have it forever. If it's bad, we spent less money than the three of us seeing it in a theater.
I had a theory when I was obtaining LPs. A collection of fewer than 200 is ultimately boring. You hear the same stuff too often. Once you reach 200+, you rarely get bored -- you have enough variety (breadth and depth) to keep you interested. The same is true with DVDs. I just need greater depth and breadth to keep me satisfied than 200. | | | If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.
Cliff |
| Registered: May 26, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 2,879 |
| Posted: | | | | As far as myself as a collector, first and foremost I buy what I like. I don't care if someone is like 'why do you own Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death?' That aside, I am working on lists of great films, and on the Criterion collection, so while I love a good (bad?) B-movie, I'm also something of a film snob. There are movies that just sound dumb to me and I have no interest. Rules for DVDs I can get at my shop: - If it's something I'm looking for, grab it. - If it's classic Hollywood, grab it. - If it looks like it might be good & I haven't seen it in the shop previously, grab it. - If it looks remotely interesting & hits the cheap section, grab it. - Upgrade 3 releases to blu per week. I get DVDs so cheaply where I work that I'll pick up anything that sounds remotely interesting. I have a lot of rom-coms that I grabbed out of our cheap section for $1. At that price if it sucks I don't care. Rule for DVDs I have to pay real money for: - Buy it only if I'm looking for it. I suppose one should only consider my "collection building" limited to those I'm willing to pay real money for. For the most part at this stage those are classic Hollywood, anime, or releases in collections I'm working on - Criterion, Global Lens, etc, or films with favorite cast or crew members. It depends on the movie whether or not I'll wait for release. For some, I'll wait as long as I have to. LotR on blu, for example. We have the current release in my shop right now, but since it's the theatrical cut I'm waiting for the release of the extended edition. On the other hand, I've already picked up Avatar and don't see a reason to bother with picking up the 3D edition when that comes out. But a lot of films, if I have the single disc edition and a double disc comes into the shop, I automatically trade up. Yes, I have definitely changed since I started picking up DVDs. I grab a lot more of them now. I no longer have cable or broadcast TV, and largely never go to the movie theatre (like Daruma, I hate it, but I make an exception for the IMAX so I've seen 2 movies in the theatre this year - Shackleton's Antarctic Adventure and Hubble), so my collection is everything that is available to me to watch. I don't intend to stay at this job forever, so I'm taking advantage of my discount while I've got it. If I get another job (such as the one I applied for yesterday, *crosses fingers*) I will be limiting my purchasing to 1 wishlist item per week. | | | If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world. -- Thorin Oakenshield | | | Last edited: by Danae Cassandra |
| Registered: March 14, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 4,245 |
| Posted: | | | | How do you view yourself as a collector? I collect what I like. Nothing stops me from buying what I'm interested in, even if it stars actors I dislike or that others don't like either.
Do you have a set of personal rules when it comes to purchasing your DVDs? Unless it's a must buy, I can wait till it gets much cheaper, If I shake it and it sounds like the disc is loose, I look for another copy. I try to pay strict attention to the security tape so that when I remove it that it won't ruin the paper artwork that it maybe stuck to.
Buying habits; example, are you patient? Will you buy a new release DVD knowing that a superior edition will be out in the coming months? Blockbusters are my weakness, I just must buy those when released or soon after. Also depending on any store exclusives, may sway me to buy a title on DVD sooner than I plan. Otherwise I wait till it gets cheap. TV Seasons I always wait till they are on sale. I just can't justify spending $40+ on any TV series, unless it's a complete series set.
Have you changed the way you buy DVDs since you started collecting? Yup, I now wait for most DVDs to go on sale before buying them except for blockbusters or cool exclusives. I used to go and buy things when they first come out, now I wait.
Have you evolved? Yup. Into a more penny pinching buyer, instead of a must have it first buyer. |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 3,197 |
| Posted: | | | | My buying habits have definitely changed. Back when I started collecting DVDs, I used to pre-order everything so I'd have it on or before the day of release. I rarely stopped to consider the cost. If I wanted it, it would be mine as soon as possible. In retrospect this was not a good approach. I spent a lot of money on poor films, bad transfers and overpriced special editions. Only to buy them again when the next remastered deluxe edition arrived.
Now I pre-order almost nothing unless I've read a couple of good reviews first. I'm much more nitpicking about the transfers. Even on blu-ray they are often not good enough. I also tend to wait much longer before I buy the films that are not must-haves. They can easily sit a year or more on my wish list until the price is right. And of course, these days I already have most of the films I really want which makes my collecting habits much more relaxed. | | | First registered: February 15, 2002 | | | Last edited: by Nexus the Sixth |
| Registered: May 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 54 |
| Posted: | | | | How do you view yourself as a collector? I don't, as I'm not a collector. DVDs are simply a viable alternative to modern broadcast television, be it cable, satellite or terrestrial.
Do you have a set of personal rules when it comes to purchasing your DVDs? As long as the material falls within the fence of my own viewing tastes (old British television and cinema), I then apply straight forward intuition. With the exception of maybe three or four titles over the last ten years, I've never yet procured anything I didn't enjoy viewing.
Buying habits; example, are you patient? Will you buy a new release DVD knowing that a superior edition will be out in the coming months? The material I purchase doesn't often come out on multiple releases, ranging from first release vanilla to ultimate editions. So I just buy what I want, when I want it. I have a healthy disposable income, so cost isn't particularly an issue, though I do enjoy a good bargain like everyone else. My only problem is that there are far more titles currently available than I have time to watch. So I need to exercise a degree of constraint, so I don't end up with a ridiculous backlog of material that I'll struggle to view in the near future.
Have you changed the way you buy DVDs since you started collecting? No. My purchasing has been fairly uniform over the last decade, and is likely to remain so in the foreseeable future.
Have you evolved? To a degree, yes. DVD as a medium has allowed me to broaden my experiences of archive media beyond the well-known (and popular) film and television titles, into areas and material I'm too young to remember first time around. So although many films and programmes are quite old, to me they're new. And what a delight it is to discover something particularly good fifty or more years after it was first broadcast or shown on a cinema screen. | | | Last edited: by analogueman |
| | Blair | Resistance is Futile! |
Registered: October 30, 2008 | Posts: 1,249 |
| Posted: | | | | Mental-ity? *bangs head against the wall while cuddling a DVD* I like analogueman's answer to the first question. I am only considered a collector (by others) because I have a number of DVD's which exceeds what your casual owner possesses. I'm not a collector; I simply own 200+ DVD's. If I were a handyman and owned 200+ tools to cover all situations that I might run into, I doubt that anyone who looks at my "collection" of tools for the first time would call me "a collector of tools." I'd never really thought about this before, but I would probably, more correctly, call myself a "DVD hobbyist." As an extension of the first answer, I have always only bought what I know I will watch over and over again or hope that I will enjoy enough to watch over and over again. I have no interest in buying something "just because it's there" no matter the price. If I had the chance to buy 100 DVD's for $50 not knowing anything about their content, then my perspective is that I would be "wasting $50 and taking up space," not "gaining 100 DVD's." Even if a movie is one that I do really want, I still feel no need to pre-order or buy it right away. It's not going anywhere; I don't have to have it right now. I don't have to have it ever. I would like to have it, but if I don't get it, I'll live without obsessing. For those reasons, I have to say I am middle of the road when it comes to prices of my buying. By waiting, the price will drop (but I'm not waiting so that the price will drop). However, I do want the DVD that has the most features which fit my interest. Only if I am gaining something substantial will I double-dip (although that can range in several ways, often because I was given a basic version as a gift and simply have not gotten rid of it even though the feature-filled 2-disc version was released at the same time and decide severla months later to buy that version.) So, nothing has changed for me over time because I was neither obsessed nor timid about my purchasing. Even my Profiler wishlist would have a bare minimal number if not for the fact that I use that tab for another purpose else as well. | | | If at first you don't succeed, skydiving isn't for you.
He who MUST get the last word in on a pointless, endless argument doesn't win. It makes him the bigger jerk. |
| Registered: May 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 54 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Blair: Quote: I like analogueman's answer to the first question. I am only considered a collector (by others) because I have a number of DVD's which exceeds what your casual owner possesses. I'm not a collector; I simply own 200+ DVD's. If I were a handyman and owned 200+ tools to cover all situations that I might run into, I doubt that anyone who looks at my "collection" of tools for the first time would call me "a collector of tools." I'd never really thought about this before, but I would probably, more correctly, call myself a "DVD hobbyist." I couldn't agree more. It's a common misconception that if you possess a number of something, then you must be a collector. Even if what you own has a defined purpose. I wonder what people would have said had they seen me throwing my old 'collection' of VHS tapes into the dumpster ten years ago? For me, the DVD is simply the (current) physical vehicle which enables me to enjoy old media. Twenty years ago it was VHS. In a few years time it might be just Blu-ray or cheap RAM sticks, and in a hundred years time, we might be beaming holographic scans of films directly into our brains with lasers - who knows. |
| Registered: August 18, 2007 | Posts: 100 |
| Posted: | | | | In the past 12 months or so I've refused to buy a number of DVDs based only on poor cover art. Distributors keep re-releasing titles and changing the cover art and gets worse each time. Or they keep the original cover art but put a ridiculous border around with some meaningless title like "Must own edition" or "Director's choice". It makes the DVD look very cheap. | | | Last edited: by Dr Hasslein |
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