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With new options, DVDs are at your disposal

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BY MICAH MERTES / Lincoln Journal Star

Thursday, Sep 04, 2008 - 12:58:23 am CDT

It used to be straightforward: If you wanted to rent a movie, you picked one up from your local video store.

These days, that arrangement is about as fresh as Molly Ringwald’s career. (Fun fact: Nearly 30 Molly Ringwald movies are available at Netflix.com.)

Although 75 percent of movie renters still get their flicks this way, the past few years have seen a boom in alternative movie rental methods.

Story Photo
With so many DVD rental options, movies are practically at your fingertips. (Illustration by Robert Becker)
How are people renting?

Public chain video stores: 40.6 percent of movie renters

Independent stores: 34.7 percent

Online subscription services: 22 percent

Redbox kiosks: 2.4 percent

(Source: Entertainment Merchants Association)

Local DVD rental options

Blockbuster

DVD rental prices: $4.49 for new releases (two days) and older films (one week); $4.99 for Blu-Ray.

Rental plans:

1. Unlimited rentals, one out at a time, no due dates: $21.99 a month

2. Unlimited rentals, two out at a time, no due dates: $29.99 a month

3. Blockbuster Rewards card: $9.95 a year. Includes one free rental every month; one free rental for every five movies or games rented, and one free older release for every new release rented Monday through Wednesday.

Pros: Location, location, location (Lincoln has eight Blockbusters). Also, some flicks are exclusive to Blockbuster because of movie studio deals.

Cons: More expensive than other options.

Best patroned by: the typical movie-renter who doesn’t want to drive too far or mess with mail order.



Hollywood Video

Locations: 2712 Cornhusker Highway and 110 N. 66th St.

DVD rental prices: $2.99 for new releases; $1.99 for film library movies.

Rental plans:

1. MVP Basic (three film library DVDs out at one time; keep rentals for five days): $14.99 a month.

2. MVP-2 Premium (two of any DVD rentals out at one time; no due dates): $24.99 a month

3. MVP-3 Premium (three of any DVD rentals out at one time; no due dates): $29.99 a month

Pros: Decent prices; centrally located.

Cons: None, if you prefer brick-and-mortar to mail order

Best patroned by: again, the typical movie-renter who doesn't want to drive too far or mess with mail order.



Audio-Visual Video Rental

Location: 2301 N. 33rd St.

DVD rental prices: $2.99 for new releases (one day); $1.99 for general titles (two days). Other options include three new releases for three days ($8.97) or five general titles for five days ($6.95).

Rental plans: Unlimited rental pass ($25 a month). Includes two new releases at a time or four general titles at a time or two video games at a time.

Pros: Locally owned; good selection of hard-to-find DVDs. The store also carries VHS cassettes for sale or rental. Oh, and that little room in the back, if that’s your thing.

Cons: Only one location.

Best patroned by: renters looking for rare or out-of-print releases or those without a DVD player.



Lincoln Sound and Disc

Location: 2700 N. 48th St.

DVD rental prices:

Any DVD in the store: $2 for the first and $1 for each additional rental (three days). Full TV seasons: $3 for four days.

Rental plans: None

Pros: Low prices.

Cons: One location, minimal selection, limited supply.

Best patroned by: renters who want to get a lot of bang for the buck and don't mind waiting for the new stuff.



Spindle Records

Location: 122 N. 14th St.

DVD rental prices: $3 for general titles (three days); $3.50 for Criterion Collection titles (three days).

Rental plans: None

Pros: Foreign, documentary and Indie film-centric.

Cons: College students make up 50 percent of the store’s business, and those customers aren’t always around.

Best patroned by: those with a taste for the rare and exotic.



DVDs are also available from Lincoln's eight city libraries. Just get a library card, and DVDs are free.



Netflix.com vs. Blockbuster Total Access

Netflix.com

Launched: Late 1999

Number of subscribers: 8.4 million

Most popular monthly plans:

1 at-a-time (2 a month): $4.99

1 at-a-time (unlimited): $8.99

2 at-a-time (unlimited): $13.99

3 at-a-time (unlimited): $16.99

Number of titles: 100,000

Average days to receive movies in the mail: 1-2 days

Why it's better than Blockbuster Total Access: It's cheaper and offers free streaming of thousands of films for PC users with Unlimited Netflix plans, an option Blockbuster doesn't have. Also, Netflix offers its Roku Box ($99), which lets users stream thousands of films right to their TVs.



Blockbuster.com

Launched: November 2006

Number of subscribers: 3.1 million

Most popular monthly plans:

1 at-a-time (2 a month): $9.99

1 at-a-time (unlimited): $11.99

2 at-a-time (unlimited): $16.99

3 at-a-time (unlimited): $19.99

Number of titles: 85,000

Average days to receive movies in the mail: 1-2 days

Why it's better than Netflix: With each plan, you get a different number of additional free in-store movie rentals.

Here’s a closer look, dear cinephiles, at three options.

DVD subscription services

In short: At the turn of the millennium, a little red company with a daring idea shattered the old way of doing things. Now, Netflix.com mails out about 2 million DVDs a day to its 8.4 million customers. Netflix expects to serve 9.1 million to 9.7 million subscribers by the end of the year, the company says.

Eventually, Blockbuster got into the mix, launching a similar Web-based service called Total Access. Several other online renters have popped up as well, including DVD Avenue, CafeDVD, EHit and Peerflix. 

How it works: Forget video stores. Log onto your movie queue, load it full of the movies you want to watch, and then, via some magic (and a flat-rate credit card payment), those movies end up in your mailbox (your REAL one, not e-mail).

On the downside: A few glitches in the system have led to delayed movie arrivals.

Redbox

In short: It’s red, but it has nothing to do with Netflix.

Since 2003, the Redbox kiosks have become a staple of fast-food joints and grocery stores, with 10,000 of them scattered throughout the country, including five in Lincoln (four at Hy-Vee stores; one at Walmart on North 27th Street). Entertainment Merchants Association ranked Redbox as the fifth-largest DVD rental company in the United States.

How it works: Reserve a movie at Redbox.com, or just go to one of the kiosks. Feed the machine some cash ($1), and your movie pops out like Pringles. Return the DVD, which is due the next day, to any Redbox. The kiosks hold more than 600 DVDs with 70-200 titles updated weekly.

On the downside: The boxes have a limited selection of films, especially compared to other options.

Downloading and streaming

In short: A series of companies have begun offering digital downloads or streams of feature films.

How it works: With Apple’s iTunes or Amazon’s Unbox services, you download movies to your computer. You’ll then have that movie file on your hard drive until it expires after a certain amount of time (usually a month).

Streaming allows you to watch movies right on your browser. Sites like Hulu.com offer free streaming of full features, such as “The Karate Kid” or “The Karate Kid II.” And Netflix offers streaming of thousands of titles for those with an account.

On the downside: Not everybody likes watching movies on computer screens. You’ve got to buy an extra cable or two (and have some patience for trouble-shooting) to hook up your PC or Mac to your TV.

Reach Micah Mertes at 473-7395 or mmertes@journalstar.com.



Technology to kill the video store?

Technology hasn’t been kind to the bricks-and-mortar video store, and some old-school competitors are having to adapt to stay in the market. 

Though 75 percent of DVD renters still pick up their flicks at video stores, services such as Netflix and Blockbuster Total Access have cut into their rental revenue, which declined from $10 billion annually in 2001 to $6 billion today. 

Randy Abel, general manager of Lincoln’s Audio-Visual Video Rental for the past 25 years, remembers when the city had three Audio-Visual stores. One closed about five years ago; the other shut its doors last year.

DVD subscription services such as Netflix, he said, have delivered several devastating blows to mom-and-pop video stores over the years. “They’re trying to put the little guys out of business.”

One of the things keeping his store open, he said wryly, is the little room for adult movies in the back — something Netflix hasn’t jumped onto, yet.

Audio-Visual is a 6,000-square-foot store, he said, and that 200-square-foot back room accounts for one-third of the store’s business.

“We might have been under by now,” he said, “if we didn’t have that little room.”

Music and video rental store Spindle Records, 122 N. 14th St., doesn’t have a little back room, but it does boast a series of hard-to-find specialty DVDs. (So does Netflix.) The mail-in services have hurt his store’s business a bit in the past couple years, said co-owner Spencer Munson, but people are still renting.

Some just like the old way of doing things. Like Ann Whisinnand, 24, who gets movies from Blockbuster stores. No Netflix for her.

“I just don’t want to hassle with the mail,” she said. “I’m kind of a stick in the mud, I guess.”

— Micah Mertes


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netflix user wrote on September 4, 2008 2:29 pm:
" I live in the middle of nowhere and don't get to town often to pick up/return movies so I have been using Netflix for about 9 months and love it. They try their best to get the movies to you as quickly as possible. You can also watch some of their movies on line at no extra cost. The new HD TVs are set up to easily use them like computer monitors. I watch stuff on Hulu also. If you just look around the net enough, there are several places to watch movies and tv shows on line. "

one of the first wrote on September 4, 2008 4:05 pm:
" I was one of the first people to sign up for blockbuster online in 2005 when they were doing a test run. they keep me at my test run monthly rate of $16 a month and I get 4 movies at a time with two free video game rentals every month. BB will keep my business as long as I keep getting this sweet deal "