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Slightly better than a rooftop antenna . . . |
Like many movie aficionados, I am by nature a collector. I'm just old enough to remember a time, though, when even movie fans rarely owned their own copies of their favorites. The tech wasn't as widely available, and the movies themselves - because they were exorbitantly expensive - weren't as commonly purchased to own. We rented instead.
Once upon a time, Mom and Pop video rental stores were almost as ubiquitous as Redbox kiosks are today. The good news was that the cost of rental was well within most families' budgets provided they could make the initial investment in a VCR. Even better, all of those video stores (and their customers) were so eager for new content that store shelves overflowed with movies of every stripe. Of course, such a wealth of choices was a movie fan's dream, but rental did not scratch the itch to collect one's favorites. If you were really enterprising you could purchase a second VCR and dub copies of your rental tapes, but it was only a matter of time before the movie industry plugged up that hole by widely adopting Macrovision copy protection.
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LaserDisc - It's Portable! |
Throughout the first decade of the new millennium I purchased an absurd number of DVDs. Curating my own collection even took precedence over actually going to the theater, since for the cost of a movie ticket and some popcorn I could actually own my own copy of each new release just a few months after it was in theaters. My rule of thumb: if I entertained the notion of venturing out to the theater to see a new release, I just bought a copy of the DVD a few months later instead. My DVD collection grew exponentially in a very short period of time based upon this somewhat specious reasoning.
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My first Limited Edition DVD purchase |
Not surprisingly, though, I soon found myself with a sizable collection that housed far too many disappointing catalog releases and watch-it-once-and-forget-it new releases. I had to institute some buying parameters to insure more judicious purchases. I stopped buying new releases sight unseen, and I began to be far more selective about my catalog purchases. A DVD did not warrant a purchase unless I was certain it was a title I'd watch multiple times. Catalog titles did not warrant a purchase until after reviews hit the internet to tell me whether or not it was a quality release.
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A bigger priority than Jaws |
Since my purchases were now required to be titles that were previously difficult to obtain, or difficult to see elsewhere, or - in my own humble opinion - worthy of multiple viewings, it almost goes without saying that the discs I did purchase were usually titles that I would enthusiastically recommend to others. One more parameter, perhaps more important than all the rest, began to govern my purchases: if it's a title that I want to share with others, it's a buy. It was the birth of my horror movie advocacy.
At the same time, it was essentially the death of my spend-crazy ways. That's not necessarily a bad thing, I guess, but it did mean that my purchases became fewer and far less frequent. Since by that point I already owned copies of most catalog titles worth owning, my buying began to revolve only around newer titles that made the grade. When I consider now my purchases over the course of the last several years, I find that there have been distressingly few of those.
I've been vocal here at the Dog Farm with my advocacy of Pontypool (2008), a movie I still frequently loan out to others. I continue to share Trick 'r Treat (2007) with as many people as I can every Halloween, because I'm determined to do my part to make it a perennial staple. I frequently loan out [REC] (2007) because it kills my soul that American audiences are still more familiar with the inferior English language remake. Attack The Block (2011) is one of my more recent causes. I just can't understand how this relatively big and wildly entertaining release managed to fly beneath so many radars. There have been others - Laid To Rest (2009), House Of The Devil (2009), John Dies At The End (2012) - but still too few to warrant more than a trickle of new purchases. I still see plenty of movies that I enjoy, but I don't see that many that inspire my whole-hearted advocacy.
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My Pre'Ween shopping list for 2014 |
Which newer movies have you really gone out of your way to recommend to others recently, and what makes them deserving of special attention? If you consider yourself a horror movie advocate, what qualities are most likely to earn a movie your own personal seal of approval?