Streaming has made movies very widely available, which makes my life easier. Since I’ve been writing books about horror movies and such, being able to see them now that video rental stores have disappeared, helps. (At least when they’re available.) But I’m not ready to stop singing the praises of the DVD just yet. (Or Blu-ray, if you roll that way.) They definitely have their advantages, at least until the disc goes bad. When you watch a movie as a form of research, and you haven’t been taking adequate notes, you might need to stop afterwards and watch a scene again. What I’ve noticed with streaming services that include commercials is that if you rewatch you have to be subjected to two minutes of commercials first. And if you only vaguely remember where the scene was you may need to sit through four or six minutes of advertising. Maybe more.
The humble DVD had the chapter menu. And no commercials that you couldn’t skip. My books have involved using DVDs whenever possible for that reason. Quite a few of the movies discussed in Sleepy Hollow as American Myth had to be viewed via streaming. Going back and finding that exact scene where the question mark lingers can be quite time consuming. There’s a reason you can only write a limited number of such books! The DVD was, naturally, an improvement over the VHS tape with its endless rewinding. Of course, streaming has reintroduced having to scan back through a movie to find a spot instead of picking a chapter close to where you remember the scene. First world problems, I know, but no less annoying for being so. It’s the world in which I live.
Then there’s the bonus of extras. I know some streaming services offer side menus with additional information, but those of us who are focus-challenged need to watch the story. Extras were for afterwards. Does anybody else feel old for having grown up with the only way to see movies being either the theater or a grainy black-and-white small rendition on television several years later? Now movies are whipping past me through the ether all the time. Landing on devices and beginning to play if your cursor hovers too long on the spot. I used to avoid going to movies alone—they were a social occasion as well as an entertainment one. Now I stream alone, often at the price of commercials, and during those interludes I’m thinking of DVDs, and how they were made for research. A strange thing to say for a guy who used to trust only books.
