Los Angeles Times, Calendarlive.com
HOME VIDEO
Give me 'MacGyver'! Demand leads to DVDs
Fans ask for a favorite show or film on disc and studios respond.
Input on bonus material, packaging is also sought.
By Elaine Dutka, Times Staff Writer
Tyson Craemer, a 22-year-old graphic design student, is crazy
about Jim Henson's "Fraggle Rock" series, a show about three civilizations
cohabiting the same universe. It debuted on HBO in 1983 the
year after Craemer was born. His hopes for a DVD resurrection
faltered when the Hallmark Channel canceled reruns a few years
ago.
Undeterred, he was one of 30,000 petitioners for a home video
release. Late last year came word that HIT Entertainment, lured
by the prospect of a passionate, easy-to-reach audience, would
release two DVDs in January and another on April 15.
Craemer and his obsession have plenty of company. In recent years,
e-mail campaigns and fan demand have also triggered DVDs of Universal
Studios' "The Big Lebowski," 20th Century Fox's "Simon and Garfunkel:
The Concert in Central Park," Lions Gate's "Glengarry Glen Ross"
and Paramount Pictures' "MacGyver" series. Home video executives
peruse websites such as dvdtalk.com and dvdfile<243>.com in search
of requests and complaints.
If it's not exactly democracy in action, it is a lively trend
in home video research: probing the consumer mind-set to determine
which DVDs are most in demand, what bonus features would bolster
sales and what packaging is most appealing.
The Web is the great equalizer, Craemer says by phone from his
home in Boca Raton, Fla. "Hollywood doesn't have to guess what
the customers want we're telling them," he says.
And they're listening. Home video executives at 20th Century Fox
meet semiannually with a group called Home Theater Forum, whose
members fly out at their own expense to weigh in on upcoming product.
MGM's "Showgirls" DVD included a feature-length audio commentary,
"The Greatest Movie Ever Made," by super-fan David Schmader
a novel take for a film skewered by critics. Sony Pictures, meanwhile,
put alternative packaging concepts for TV's "Party of Five" online,
shelving its initial choice when 85% of respondents opted for
another.
"Interacting with fans becomes a great marketing vehicle, one
with a huge payoff," says Don Rosenberg, publisher of the Santa
Ana-based Home Media Retailing Magazine. "You're letting them
know a title is on the way without spending any advertising dollars.
It's also a reality check for insulated Hollywood executives and
a means of generating goodwill."
Lions Gate found out just how valuable fan input can be with "The
Crying Game." Logging on to a website, the distributor stumbled
onto rumors about an alternate ending, one confirmed by director
Neil Jordan. That footage was included on a DVD released in January.
On its "T-2 Special Edition," director James Cameron reversed
a decision not to record commentary, at fans' urging.
Based on information gathered from the Web, focus groups and screenings,
Universal Studios scheduled two separate DVD launches in the fall
of 2003 for Brian De Palma's "Scarface" a New York event featuring
stars Michelle Pfeiffer and Al Pacino and a gala in Puerto Rico
attended by more than 300 urban disc jockeys catering to its
hard-core hip-hop audience. In response to public interest, the
studio is releasing the Coen brothers' "The Big Lebowski" on home
video later this year.
"We're going to coordinate the launch around one of the 'Lebowski'
fests," says Ken Graffeo, executive vice president of marketing
for Universal Studios Home Entertainment. "A lot of these movies
develop fans afterward ... who would have known?"
Warner Bros.' catalog division has also been aggressive in soliciting
feedback. Last week, executives participated in an annual online
chat, moderated by the Home Theater Forum. During the three-hour
session, they fielded questions from the 200 to 300 people logged
on. When will "Ryan's Daughter" be in video stores? one asked.
Why has the special edition of "The Maltese Falcon" been so long
in the making? another wondered.
For the last two years, Warners has also conducted cyber-polls
asking respondents which five movies they'd like to see on DVD
out of 20 screened on Time Warner's Turner Classic Movies channel.
After tabulating the 180,000 responses, the studio released "The
Letter" (1940), "Ice Station Zebra" (1968) "Ivanhoe" (1952), "King
Solomon's Mines" (1950) and "Random Harvest" (1942) in January.
"Ever since DVDs broadened beyond the 'early adapters' young
males more interested in 'Terminator 3' and the like," says George
Feltenstein, senior vice president of the classic catalog for
Warner Bros. Home Video, "we've tried to satisfy the appetite
of older fans while introducing the product to the younger generation
whose idea of an old movie is 'Star Wars.' "
Classic movies have a particularly loyal following, says Steve
Feldstein, senior vice president for Fox Home Entertainment, because
intense "longing," as he puts it, only comes with time. And TV
is also a burgeoning area on the DVD front.
"TV is much more fan-based," says Marc Rashba, vice president
of catalog marketing for Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. People
"spend four, five, six years of their lives with a program and
are very vocal."
Devotees of "Farscape" took out print and TV ads after the series
was canceled in 2004 without a proper conclusion, they maintained.
The SciFi Network ultimately aired a four-hour miniseries that
was released by Lions Gate's home video division in January. The
website moonlighting21.com lobbied for a reunion show, starring
Cybill Shepherd and Bruce Willis, as well as a DVD launch. They
got their second wish, at least and six members of their group
are featured on the Lions Gate DVD, the first two seasons of which
come out May 31.
Diana Maiocco, a New York City TV advertising consultant, is media
director of Moonlighting Strangers, a publication found on moonlighting21.com
and one of the six who flew out to Los Angeles in February to
be interviewed for the DVD.
"We were very nervous and very honored," Maiocco says. "Still,
it behooves the studios to pay attention to us because who knows
the product better? Instead of taking an e-mail approach, we conducted
behind-the-scenes interviews with the cast and crew, including
one with the creator, Glenn Caron. Being part of the commentary
... that's some sort of victory for us."