Watch your favourite TV shows on MSN Video Player now © MSN
Paul Arendt, MSN Movies

Film For Free: Are Movies Going The Way Of Music?

In a highly unusual move for a national newspaper, last weekend’s Mail on Sunday gave away a full length, unreleased feature film.
Nobel Son (Image © Rex)
Nobel Son, a kidnapping comedy starring Alan Rickman as a Nobel laureate, was first seen at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2007. Critics at the time weren’t much impressed, but the movie’s quality is beside the point. The fact that a fairly major motion picture (the cast list also featuresEliza Dushku, Danny De Vito and Mary Steenburgen) can get its first UK release as a newspaper freebie just goes to show how quickly the movie distribution business is changing.
 
Right now, there are scores of ways to see recent films without ever setting foot in a cinema or a DVD store. Companies like Lovefilm will post films direct to their customers. Netflix, which runs on a similar business model, also offers streaming movies direct to your TV.  Apple will let you download movies and TV shows to play on your iPod on the way to work, and a number of games consoles offer downloaded movies from your broadband line.
 
PC users can choose between dozens of sites offering free and public domain feature films for download. You can even find forgotten B movies like Attack of the Giant Leeches and Teenagers From Outer Space. The Luc Besson-produced environmental documentary Home had its premiere, not in a glitzy Los Angeles multiplex, but on YouTube. Director Sally Potter went a step further and opened her fashion industry movie Rage on mobile phones.
 
 
And these, of course, are just the legal options. Movie piracy, once the province of the sneaky camcorder and the dodgy market stall video, is now a massive presence on the internet. If you step back and look at the bigger picture, there is a clear parallel between what is happening to the movie business right now and what happened to the music business ten years ago. Digital and alternative methods of distribution are taking over from the traditional movie viewing experience, and distributors face their biggest challenge since the home video boom of the 1980s.
 
Purists will argue that watching the latest Bruce Willis blockbuster from the privacy of your laptop cannot compare with the experience of going out to the movies, but what exactly are we giving up? Half an hour of commercials? The privilege of paying £5 for a bucket of stale popcorn?  Struggling to hear the dialogue over that kid with the mobile phone in the front row? With digital projection and surround sound more affordable than ever before, the home movie experience is not only vastly cheaper than a night at the multiplex, it’s arguably more fun.
 
It remains to be seen how Hollywood will respond to this challenge in the long term, but for now, the movie business is falling back on spectacle to pull in the punters. Warner Bros in particular has embraced IMAX, most successfully in the gigantic action sequences of The Dark Knight. Meanwhile, millions have been invested in improving 3D technology, and its biggest test to date will come when James Cameron’s sci-fi blockbuster Avatar hits cinemas in December.  But will that be enough to get movie lovers back to the cinema? Eventually, the big studios may have to embrace the future and release their brand new blockbusters online. We’ll all be attending the premiere from our living rooms. Hey, maybe new sci-fi flick Surrogates isn’t so far off the mark after all…
 
Rate this article: PoorPoorNot GoodOkGoodExcellentExcellent
Your rating helps other users gauge the value of an article
... opens a new window

MORE ON MSN MOVIES

The Green Zone (Image © Universal)
Green Zone

Trailer: Matt Damon is reunited with Bourne director Paul Greengrass in this slick new military thriller set for release in March 2010.

OUT THIS WEEK

  • An Education (E1 Entertainment)An Education

    Word-of-mouth buzz is spreading about this charming story of unlikely lovers. Meet Carey Mulligan in her breakout role in new British hit An Education.

  • Fantastic Mr Fox (Twentieth Century Fox)Trailer: The Fantastic Mr Fox

    Video: George Clooney is doing what he does best in the new stop-motion animation from Wes Anderson - being smooth.

Watch your favourite TV shows on MSN Video Player now © MSN

TOP FEATURES

entertainment movies article related
en-gb

QUESTION OF THE WEEK

  1. What will happen next in the Russell Brand/Katy Perry romance?

Vote to see results

Click here to see results without voting

  1. What will happen next in the Russell Brand/Katy Perry romance?
    1. They’ll split up by Christmas
      20%
    2. They’ll get engaged
      17%
    3. Russell will cheat on Katy
      22%
    4. Katy will get pregnant
      9%
    5. A sex tape will be leaked
      20%
    6. They'll record a duet
      3%
    7. She’ll kiss a girl… and like it
      9%
23353 responses, not scientifically valid, results updated every minute.

Top Story

Top Story

Play our Search Supremo Movie Quiz
Search Supremo Movie Quiz

No one could possibly complete this quiz alone, but with the help of Live Search you might just be able to... maybe.

Top Story

Play our Movie Mash-Up game
Movie Mash-Up Game

Click the squares to gain points and guess who the actor hiding is...

Top Story

Play our brilliant new game Movie Trumps
Movie Trumps

Play our fantastically addictive game Movie Trumps. Pitch great films off against each other to get on our high score table...

Follow MSN Entertainment on Facebook (Image © Twitter, Facebook)
Join us on MSN Entertainment

Become a fan of MSN Entertainment on Facebook, get instant updates by following us on Twitter and find out how to get news, views and reviews on the move with entertainment on your mobile.

Play Movie Trumps