Yes. For instance, a friend of mine was going on about the end of Reqiuem for a Dream because I mentioned that I find Jennifer Connelly quite fetching.
So I rent it from Blockbuster. Watch it. Fine movie, some nice stuff with Connelly, but nothing especially remarkable about the end.
So I’m talking about this with my friend, and he says “You weren’t impressed with the double headed dildo scene?”
“What double headed dildo scene?” I thought he was kidding, until I read about it elsewhere, and read about Blockbuster editing movies.
Fuck that noise. I do Netflix, and I stream through my PS3. When I need to rent, I go to Family Video, where they not only don’t edit movies, but have a porn section.
I am curious if Blockbuster still edits movies, and if they do this with their mail based service.
Unless something has changed in the recent past, Blockbuster won’t carry NC-17 or unrated films. So, for films like Requiem for a Dream, the version that you’ll find at Blockbuster is an R-rated version, with the NC-17 stuff edited out. I had a similar experience several years ago with The Cook, the Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover–I’d seen the unedited, NC-17 version previously, and noticed the Blockbuster version left out several of the more graphic scenes.
I don’t know exactly WHO does the editing–I seem to recall that some movie studios will release these R-rated versions of NC-17 films precisely because companies like Wal-Mart and Blockbuster won’t carry them otherwise.
So, it may not be entirely accurate to say that Blockbuster edits the films themselves–but it is true (or has been) that they only carry edited versions of such films. That’s why I abandoned Blockbuster ages ago, and today am devoted to Netflix.
If your choice of films are never NC-17, then you may not have a problem with Blockbuster. It’s just something to be aware of, anyway.
I am with Netflix because of the price, selection, and lack of censorship of bawdier titles (I liked Shortbus, for example). However, I thought I’d never use the streaming feature and now I use it all. the. time. Streaming on Netflix and Hulu combined have taken over 100% of my watching; I moved a month ago and I still haven’t hooked up my TV, which I used mostly for receiving the Netflix discs.
I put Netflix down to one disc a month and just watch what’s available on streaming.
More power to you if it’s not what you’re looking for, but I think streaming is the future. It’s so convenient to be able to pull up a big library and find something to watch; I find that it allows me to try things I otherwise wouldn’t have committed to getting on disc.
Netflix streaming doesn’t cost extra. They also have DVDs. The clogged internets tubes can be fixed by emailing Netflix some Internet-Strength Digital Drano.
Jester, my friend, the golden era of Blockbuster Online is over. It used to be that the chain store computers only told whoever ships you movies when the enveloped DVDs were returned to the store. In these days, your DVD came whether you returned your store rental or not.
No longer. Now the chain store tells the shipper exactly what you rented and the bastard that ships movies will hold your envelope hostage until you take the store’s copy back. Two weeks ago, I was extremely confused as to why they were refusing to send me movies (I previously returned store copies when I had another movie to trade in).
Missed the edit window. Yeah, I still have an account with Blockbuster. Be warned: “Very Long Wait” means a wait on the scale of waiting for Mt. Helen’s to explode again (I’ve had one in my queue for over a year; gave up on the others). It’s only significantly worse than Netflix in this respect, if you have a BB close by, BB is the better option.
I also had Netflix for around a year (Summer '07-October '07). Note that I don’t watch movies on my PC.
If he doesn’t want to spend the money for the box he doesn’t have to. If he doesn’t have high-speed internet he doesn’t have to. If he doesn’t want to stream to his computer he doesn’t have to. It’s a free option that Netflix has and BB doesn’t.
If you want to ignore a feature Netflix has that many people do enjoy and makes it that much better than BB, fine. Netflix is still better than BB just for DVD rental.
I don’t know where you are coming from here. The OP said
He obviously did not ignore the feature. He said he wasn’t interested in it. And, for him, it didn’t make the service any better. Netflix might be better for some people,but for Jester BB was the better choice since he could drop the movies off at the store and pick up a movie there, as well. He didn’t say it was better overall. Or better for everyone. He said it was better for him.
I went with Netflix first, and after awhile BB tempted me to try them. They sounded great! I tried them for all the reasons in the OP.
What they promised and what they delivered was beyond a joke, it was just atrocious. Half my DVDs arrived broken, half were wrong, and 9/10ths of the discs in my queue would just sit there saying “available now.” Except after a couple weeks of no discs I finally figured out “available now” means “not available now, add 100 more obscure movies you don’t really want to watch to your queue because those probably are available.”
I went crawling back to Netflix, kissed its feet and begged forgiveness. I’ll never cheat on you again!
It’s so simple for me. The nearest video store is 10 miles away and carries only 68 titles. (That’s two gladiator movies of 34 copies each.) The nearest Blockbuster is 50 miles away. The mailbox is 100 feet away. You do the math.
And I was talking about what the OP said. Dude already has a DVD player so watching DVDs on his TV is free where as getting a box to stream to his TV costs $100.
Neither Netfilx nor BB is free to watch DVDs. The OP said it was impossible to watch Nexflix streaming on his old TV. I pointed out that it was possible if he bought the box. I didn’t say he had to, just that it was an option. An option that would give him more reason to go with Netflix should he decide to buy the box. I use the streaming all the time and it doesn’t cost me any extra.
You seem to think that the streaming costs more and is worthless. Neither is true for me. For the OP an initial $100 investment would let him stream. That decision is his to make.
yoyodyne, if I had an extra hundred bucks to spare, it would’ve been put towards something else more useful to me, like beer. Or perhaps a mango juicer. I have no doubt that I’d enjoy streaming and all, but given the small amount of free time I have in the evenings, it’s pretty easy to anticipate the nights when I’ll actually want to/be able to watch a movie, and adjust the queue accordingly. Real, true, honest-to-God vegging out time is about as sparse in my life as is money these days (which is also the reason I don’t have cable, alas alack).
First round of movies came this weekend, and were in spotless condition. A day early, even. Sukiyaki Wester Django was fantastic, and I’m much looking forward to Blood Simple this evening. Hooray for delivery of out-there genre flicks.
Well, for my previous lauding of Netflix, they just told me that they’re increasing their surcharge to allow me to get Blu-Ray flicks from $1 to $4 meaning that my $16.99 “3 at a time” plan is now really a $20.99 plan.
Fuck that noise. I suppose I’ll have to, at least, trim down the number of movies I receive. Too bad because I enjoyed the flexibility of the 3-plan.