When I was a usher at a movie theater I once had to move a print of Reds–it took 4 of us to pick the danged thing up. You can figure a pound a minute for movie film, and dropping it on the floor is very bad…
My copy of braveheart was two tapes.
Probably doesn’t count as a movie, but WrestleMania III was on a single 3-hour tape.
You didn’t quote my second sentence: “Up to ~11-13 hours of DVD compliant video can be recorded in very bad video quality.” I have movies both on DVD-5 and DVD-9 [released by the same company] and the video quality is noticeably better on the DVD-9.
But “The maximum video length of a Video DVD-9 (dual-layer) DVD is two hours to maintain quality” is a ridiculous statment. Your own Google Books link refutes it, showing 243 minutes for a DVD-9. (Hint–there are 60 minutes in an hour, not 120.)
The Good Old Days when Wrestlemania was only 3 hours.
I recall renting Saving Private Ryan when it first came out. It was actually on one cassette and used the very thin tape. We had to exchange the first copy we got after finding the first 20 minutes of the film was mangled and unwatchable. The employee told us that a large percentage of their copies were coming back damaged.
The Right Stuff was on two cassettes.
Dang!! That would’ve been a t180 tape and very thin unless they used something other than SP speed.
The longest tape I ever saw was a T200. They typically lasted about a year (recording and playback at least twice a month.) T180s usually lasted a couple of years. T120s and T160s, unless you just happened to get a bad one, were virtually timeless. And I did have a T130 at one time, apparently not a particularly popular format.