Archive for the ‘Movies’ Category
My friends and I made a movie and added music from Star Wars, Pirates of the Caribbean ext. I burned the movie we made onto a DVD and I am giving it to only close friends and family. I added the name of the soundtrack and the composer in the credits. Someone told me to check into if this would violate copyright laws. If I’m just sharing it with friends/family for free I would not think it would be a problem. Is this legal? Please explain why or why not and if you can give a link to verify your answer that would be great. Thank you very much!
Correction: Sorry, I meant to say “that only friends/family WILL see” in the subject line.
For example, a DVD would be played in your Playstation or Xbox and would have several titled or themed options after a 20 min basic intro. You’d choose an option; then off to another 30-40 minutes of the same movie you go. Suddenly, up pops another options screen where you read some more basic titles or explanations and choose the one you think is most interesting. The movie would finally end after you’ve chosen a total of about 3-4 options. You’d never see the same movie twice if you didn’t want to!
For as long as he could remember, Carter Webb had been falling in love with women. And for as long as he could remember, he’d been searching for the right one. He found everything he was looking for in Sophia and for a little while he was happy. Unfortunately, it wasn’t meant to be. When Carter is dumped by Sophia in a North Hollywood coffee shop, he sees his entire life flash before his eyes. Heartbroken and depressed, Carter escapes Los Angeles, heading across the country to suburban Michigan to care for his ailing grandmother. An eccentric and complicated personality, Grandma offers Carter a uniquely different perspective on life and especially death. Soon after his arrival, Carter stumbles into the lives of the family living directly across the street, Sarah Hardwicke, the mother of two daughters: Paige, a precocious, effervescent eleven-year-old and her older sister Lucy, an angst ridden teenager. While Sarah faces her own personal crisis, Lucy wrestles with the fears that define her. Through his relationships with these women, as well as his grandmother, Carter begins to discover that what felt like the end was really only just the beginning of his adventure.
it hAS COMEING TO THEATER IN 3 DAYS
How many cameras am I going have to get in order to like make a movie in a little school. Cause some of my friends are planning to make a horro movie!?
We are wanting to make it look proffessional and not crappy looking movie as if some 13 year olds were filming it…But instead a proffesional Hollywood movie like type.
So how many cameras and what type?!?!?!
I want to relize it on Blu-Ray and DVD
When i rented a movie a month ago, they said i owed them for an overdue dvd. I told them that i already returned it 2 months ago. I went back a couple of days later to talk to the manager, but she was at lunch. The corporate office (or whoever) sent me a card stating that i need to return the movie.
Some people told me that the overdue fee would be high (like $100), because they could claim possible lost of revenue (other people could be renting this movie). But, isn’t that illegal (that’s why BlockBuster got sued)? Will this stupid thing ruin my credit? Can i buy this movie from somewhere else and just give it too them?
Thanks in advance.
Many R-rated movies are released on DVD, and some of them are available in unrated versions that come with the extra *** and violence and outsell the original theatrical versions. Isn’t it time that we should go to the other way- releasing edited versions of R-rated movies (PG-13 or even PG)?
Consider these following examples. Hollywood studios could release PG-13 or PG versions of R-rated titles. They are already shown as in-flight airline versions, Middle Eastern versions with the *** scenes edited out, and European versions with the violence toned down. This is why that edited airline/Middle Eastern/European versions of R-rated film titles should be sold in the United States. These will please American audiences with sensitivities and moral and/or religious convictions.
That’s why I’m asking you the following questions: What do you think? Should edited versions of R-rated movies be released on DVD?
Something about a real hollywood video compared to my home ones is that it’s slower. If you compare side by side a home movie compared to a dvd of a real movie, althought it sounds normal, you can tell that the feel is… slower on the real movie. It’s driving me crazy.
If i know how to slow the movie just that notch, i can make some really good movies… do any of you know how??









