Purchase AJA Io XT for broadcast-quality capture, monitoring and output for Avid and receive free Eye Scream Factory presets to quickly add stunning effects to your productions. Pair Io XT with Avid, MacBook Pro and Thunderbolt storage for a no-compromise
more...
For a limited time, Digistor is including Digital Tutors online training with every commercial 3ds Max or Maya purchased* giving you and your team access to the world's largest online CG training library for free.
more...
Grass Valley and Corsair Solutions are proud to announce that, as part of a special competitive upgrade promotion, users of Apple's Final Cut Pro, Adobe Premiere, and Avid's Media Composer can now upgrade to EDIUS 6 nonlinear editing software for just...
more...
IF and the Sydney Film Festival are giving away a Flexi10 worth $137
more...
Your Vote
Do you agree that the producer offset should be raised from 20 to 40 per cent for television?
Yes
No
|
Digital rollout dependent on distributor action: Atlab
[Fri 29/02/2008 11:32:47]
By Simon de Bruyn
The transition from film to digital projection in cinemas might be wholly dependent on the extent to which distributors get behind the technology, Atlab sales and marketing manager Ben Wilson told delegates at the Independent Cinemas Association of Australia conference on Wednesday.
Speaking as part of a panel on digital cinema chaired by ICAA general manager Mark Sarfaty, Wilson said the transition to the new format would require strong support from distributors due to the fact that exhibitors aren’t pressed by a commercial need to change.
‘Film projection is a long-lived beast and if the progress [towards] digital cinema stalls now all those film projectors will still be there in five years,’ he said.
‘Aside from 3D features, which exhibitors are very happy to bring in because of box office potential, the exhibitors aren’t the ones pushing for the rollout of digital. The rollout depends on who is driving digital cinema and distributors need to get involved.’
The cost associated with distributing film prints is immense, as the money spent on producing prints and transporting them to cinemas needs to be recouped before box office profits can be realised.
This session was the last in the intense two day conference for independent exhibitors from all over Australia, which covered hot topics such as piracy enforcement, the development of 4K D-Cinema, marketing, cinema advertising and point of sale advice.
ICAA also welcomed Jim C. Williams, the senior vice president and chief technology officer for the Motion Picture Association of America, as their gala dinner speaker to further elaborate on how technology is being used to fight movie theft.