Yeah it's really not the big leap in technology we've had in years past. A real leap would be the combination of TV and Internet. Blu Ray is just the last gasp of a dying industry. I'll wait it out.
And like I said, a totally unnecessary one. It does a couple extra things and has more storage. When the internet combines with the entertainment industry for real, that's going to be a very big leap... we're probably going to have to buy a host of stupid gadgets and it's going to be exclusionary for the first few years... not to mention we won't quite have the internet we know, and time will tell if its better or worse. We'll basically have something along the lines of hulu Plus, but a billion times better and more visionary. I just hope they don't region code the thing, because that will quash all potential.
THAT'S the future. Not DVD on steroids. An even then, DVD without steroids can handle a couple bleeding extra scenes. They DID go out of their way to screw those who refuse to comply. The entertainment business is tantamount to the Mafia in a LOT of cases... this is no exception.
But the thing is, it's
maddening because everything cut out of that movie was gold. Why wouldn't Muppet fandom be annoyed that we can't share that? I applaud them for the extensiveness they have brought to the Blu-Ray. I mean, no other Muppet DVD has that much special features on it. VMX was like the closest, and the deleted scenes they gave us (except for the one with Bobo) were, "oh, okay" and easy to ignore. The backstory behind Tex, while the movie works well enough without it, only strengthens the otherwise non-sequitor ending.
That's Capitalism.
And it's a capitalistic attitude behind that. The "be happy you're being excluded" attitude that just makes no sense. And like I said, even if I had a high quality home theater and refused anything that wasn't on Blu-Ray, I'd be greatly annoyed that we can't share the film the way the film makers intended. A LOT of crap goes on behind the scenes that turns a potentially great movie into a meh one. I'm glad the Looney Tunes BIA DVD had all those deleted sequences that were, frankly, better than what was there in the first place. The I Am Legend DVD (which I don't have, but read up on Cracked about) has the TRUE ending instead of the crap ending that the idiot test marketing audience liked better (which, in turn ruined the movie so much, even the title made no sense).
Even if they just pulled an MCC and put the full Tex song back into the movie for all versions of home video, I'd be happy. But there was NO care whatsoever put into the standard edition. I wouldn't be surprised if the standard edition disk was a DVD-R with the words "The Muffets" written in sharpee on it. THAT'S why the entertainment industry is failing.