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What is the must impresive thing in a DVD, Blu Ray, HD DVD Collection.
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DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantDr. Killpatient
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What impresses me is when the movie plays when I put the disc in the player.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorNexus the Sixth
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Quoting Unicus69:
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So let me see if I understand what you are saying here...if people buy mainstream films it's because they care what other people think?  I am sorry, but that just doesn't make any sense to me. 


All I'm trying to say is that diversity and keeping an open mind is generally a good idea. Hopefully no one here lives in a complete social vacuum. We're all influenced by what other people do and think, no reason to deny it or getting defensive about it. Yes, I'm sure you buy all your movies because you think you have a unique interest in them. That sounds nice in theory, but I for one have no problem admitting that I care about what other people think and sometimes I will buy a movie based on popularity or should I say faith in the rest of you. It might be a mainstream title or a minority interest, but at least the purchase is based on someone else's opinion. How else would I get new influences and ideas? Why even bother discussing movies, or anything else for that matter, if you only care about your own opinions and think you are immune to everyone else's? Yes, it's good to have a mind of your own, but it's also nice to share ideas in the mutual interest of making new discoveries.

Or maybe the whole thing is just down to good advertising. Free will is a chimera anyway.
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorNexus the Sixth
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Quoting Dr. Killpatient:
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What impresses me is when the movie plays when I put the disc in the player.


You'd be surprised how often that doesn't happen with Blu-ray discs. 
First registered: February 15, 2002
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantDr. Killpatient
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I've haven't had any problems with Blu-ray discs at all to date.

[knocks on wood]
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorTheMadMartian
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Quoting Kinoniki:
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All I'm trying to say is that diversity and keeping an open mind is generally a good idea. Hopefully no one here lives in a complete social vacuum. We're all influenced by what other people do and think, no reason to deny it or getting defensive about it. Yes, I'm sure you buy all your movies because you think you have a unique interest in them.

I don't know why you would be sure of that.  I buy most of my movies because I like them, whether or not that interest is unique never crosses my mind.

Quote:
That sounds nice in theory, but I for one have no problem admitting that I care about what other people think and sometimes I will buy a movie based on popularity or should I say faith in the rest of you. It might be a mainstream title or a minority interest, but at least the purchase is based on someone else's opinion. How else would I get new influences and ideas? Why even bother discussing movies, or anything else for that matter, if you only care about your own opinions and think you are immune to everyone else's? Yes, it's good to have a mind of your own, but it's also nice to share ideas in the mutual interest of making new discoveries.

You seem to have misunderstood what I said.  I said I don't care what people think about my taste in DVDs.  I never said that I wouldn't consider someone else's opinion on a particular film or TV show.  I've watched a lot of stuff based on other people's opinions.  Some of them I have liked, some of them I haven't.

I guess what I am trying to say is that I don't care whether or not other people think my collection is interesting.  The only thing that matters to me, since I am the one spending the time and money on it, is that I enjoy what I have.  I think that is all anybody should care about...but that's just me.
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 Last edited: by TheMadMartian
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantMark Harrison
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Registered: March 13, 2007
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Having helped to get this thread off track, I'll do my best to repair the damage. 

I don't look at other people's collections for the most part, but I can answer the question for my own collection.  The things that impress me in my collection are having all the Walt Disney Treasures sets (animation only) and having all the Fox Studio Classics.  Those movies aren't necessarily better or worse than the rest of my collection, but it's nice to see them lined up in one large chunk.  I had a cool run going with the steelbooks of the James Bond Blu-rays, but it appears that they've perhaps come to an end.  That would have been impressive to me anyway.

But those are extremely insignificant points next to seeing such a large gathering of movies all in one place that I like watching.
Get the CSVExport and Database Query plug-ins here.
Create fake parent profiles to organize your collection.
 Last edited: by Mark Harrison
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantVibroCount
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There are centain aspects of my collection I take great pride in. I find other things interesting about other people's collections -- I'm not that impressed by people thinking and collecting for the same reason I do. Show me diversity.

I'm impressed by people's collections of pure porn, of blockbuster action flicks, of particular director's works, of unique genres or eras.

My collection covers as many of my favorite films I can find... not the artsy ones that I cannot see repeatedly (Last Year at Marienbad), but the oddball ones I just enjoy watching. And I get a reasonable sample of all filmmaking eras... from the pure documentary early films, through the first story-telling ones, to the great silent comedians, to eras of genres (screwball comedies, Astaire/Rogers flicks, film noir, early TV westerns, etc.). And there are a few stars and directors whom I seek out nearly everything: Buster Keaton is the main one. Now I buy a lot of DVDs of film I haven't bothered to see in the miserable conditions that theater going gives. The reason I have Transformers was so I could see it once. The same with Cloverfield, etc. I thought it would be interesting to see them, didn't want to load up my DVR with 'em, and they're often cheaper than a single theater ticket to buy 'em.

And I buy everything Disney that I or someone in my family wants. So Disney stuff impresses me not at all.

But if you have a ton of anime, or French new wave or other things I don't have, then I'm interested.
If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.

Cliff
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorAce_of_Sevens
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Out of the things you listed, The Criterion Collection is the most impressive. What generally impresses me is breadth. I've seen collections that were 200+ volumes of anime, one copy of The Matrix, and that's it. I've also seen plenty of collections that were nothing but movies that did $100 million+ at the box office in the last few years. A variety of titles, at least of some which aren't just whatever's popular at the moment, impresses me most. Shunning mainstream for being mainstrwam or grousing about how you liked somethign before it was cool are just silly, though.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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Given that I work in a shop that buys used DVDs, what impresses me is a collection of stuff that isn't sold at Wal Mart.  We see so much of the same stuff, day in and day out, that it's a real treat to see someone bring something in that isn't the same crap that we have boxes and boxes of. 

Criterion always impresses me, as would a collection containing primarily old movies (here defined as anything made before 1980), as would a collection of non US films that aren't cheap public domain releases of martial arts films, or large numbers of documentaries.  Basically anything unusual is always a welcome sight at the store.

Also, I would be impressed by a large collection of hentai.  We see so very, very little of it. 
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DVD Profiler Unlimited Registrantmidnightmoviemadness
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2 Main things do it for me :
1)Selection(1st & Foremost)
2) Packaging( I've been so intrigued my exclusive packaging that I must of double dipped an inexcusable amt of times..lol)
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorSrehtims
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The Criterion Collection introduced me to "Foreign" films I might never have seen, plus their new Blu-ray transfers, The Third Man, The Seventh Seal, The Wages of Fear, etc.

I can easily try all genre of films.

no commercials on the TV series,

no ill-mannered audience to deal with,

if I miss something ("Foreign" subtitles) or get interrupted, I can go back and pick it.

I like collections of writers, directors and actors - I like to watch them in their production order.

Extras on how the films (FX, interviews, etc.) were made, this is why I've double dipped to Blu on some films .

Shop on line, delivered to my front and I don't have to sift through some store for them and no sales tax (although they are working that, oh, and to tax the Internet usage).

What I hate about DVDs, the FBI, Interpol warnings, they prove just how little governments care about its citizens. If somebody steals from me, you think get fined 250,000.00 and jail time, if they even catch or bother to look for them.
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantVibroCount
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Quoting Srehtims:
Quote:

What I hate about DVDs, the FBI, Interpol warnings, they prove just how little governments care about its citizens. If somebody steals from me, you think get fined 250,000.00 and jail time, if they even catch or bother to look for them.


I read recently that at some premiere of the new Harry Potter film that they were demanding that all cell phones with cameras needed to be checked. A lawyer for the federal government raised a few objections:

Name one instance, anywhere in the world, ever, that any film had been successfully pirated using a cell phone... why is there prior restraint here?

and, his phone had President Obama's blackberry number and other sensitive information in it. Could the "checking" of the cell phones meet government top secret security criteria?




Why must people who actually pay for legal DVDs and BD discs have to wait and watch warnings about piracy? Yelling at the law abiders seems incoherent.
If it wasn't for bad taste, I wouldn't have no taste at all.

Cliff
 Last edited: by VibroCount
DVD Profiler Unlimited Registrantnuoyaxin
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Quoting DJ Doena:
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I like collections from people who can explain why they own all/most of their movies and where the reason is not "I saw it in the $5 bin".

I agree with this; after all, it's important what one likes. (I do understand though what the OP is trying to say, for some reason a collection entirely and purely made up of summer blockbusters of the last 10 years just doesn't seem that interesting).

Having said that, my collection is not impressive to me, not because I only have summer blockbusters, but because I cannot explain many of my purchases I am impressed that Mark says he can.
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorJimmy S
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What "impress" me in a film collection is the genre diversity, so it's evident that mine is. It's always great to be able to pic a film whatever your mood is. I don't consider my film selection to be mainstream, but I can understand without a problem that many people like those films (they aren't mainstream for no reason).
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantGorbarama
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I buy whatever I like, I don't care if it's mainstream or something more obscure.. If I like it, or think I'll like it- then I'll buy it
A simple movie lover..
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantDr. Killpatient
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Quantity.

Everyone is impressed to see a wall covered in DVD's.
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