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TV & Entertainment / REPORT INFORMATION
IP Media Monitor Quarterly Action Report
Date
Dec, 2005
Pages
0
Price / format
€451 / Electronic
€903 / Enterprisewide
€451
Report Information
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Custom-Tailored Research
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Product Trade Lead
Abstract:
This exclusive analysis looks at the state of film distribution over the web and delivers some early-days data on the size and potential growth in this new entertainment offering.
According to our model, the market for movies on the web will generate $37.25 million in 2006 in the U.S. This level is only .15% of the domestic home video rental and sell-through market for 2005. The total number of full-length motion picture units sold (either via rental or download-to-own) over the Internet could total 9.5 million, barely 1% when compared to the 1.34 billion DVDs and videocassettes sold in 2005. Placed in context, the $37.25 million in web-based movie distribution revenue is less than the 2005 domestic box office revenue for independent film hit “Napoleon Dynamite,” which generated $44.5 million in ticket sales that year.
The sale and rental of movies over the Internet will grow dramatically over the coming years and could reach nearly 60 million (59.4 million) units by 2010, with revenues skyrocketing to over a half billion dollars ($534 million). However, even with this growth, Internet movie sales and rentals will still represent a tiny portion of the motion picture industrys revenues. The $534 million in 2010 represents only 2% of the home video rental and sales revenue generated by the motion picture business in 2005. The 59.4 million units still represents only 4% of the total home video units sold in 2005.
We conclude that the single biggest factor holding back Internet movie sales is Hollywoods reluctance to allow films to be sold over the web so that they can ultimately be viewed on TVs. Although technologies exist today that allow for the transfer of web-distributed films to traditional TV sets, these technologies are too complex for most consumers. Other technologies that allow for a smoother transition of movies to TV sets are still too new and have yet to gain traction in the marketplace.
In addition to our groundbreaking analysis, Movies-over-the-Web: Hollywoods New Box Office delivers profiles of the top web-based Internet movie sites, including:
- CinemaNow
- Movielink
- Guba
- AOL
- Vongo
- Amazon Unbox
- Apples iTunes
- iFilm
- Google
- MovieFlix
- BitTorrent
…and more
Table of contents:
I. Introduction and Overview
II. Apple’s iTunes
III. Amazon Unbox
IV. AOL Video
V. CinemaNow and Movie Link
VI. Guba
VII. Vongo
VIII. Movie Flix
IX. Fox/Direc2Drive/MySpace
X. Google Video
XI. BitTorrent
XII. Other Sites
A. Clickstar
B. MSN Movies
XIII. Potential Growth and Financial Projections of Internet-Delivered Films
About the Authors
List of Tables
Table 1 – Internet-Based Movie Distribution Sites
Table 2 – Internet-Based Movie Sales and Revenue Projections, 2006 to 2010
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