- Warner Home Video
Warner Home Video is the
home video unit of Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc., itself part ofTime Warner . It was founded in1978 as WCI Home Video (forWarner Communications, Inc. ). It was re-named Warner Home Video in1980 .The company releases titles from the film and television library of
Warner Bros. Studios , as well as programs from otherTime Warner companies. Currently, they also serve distributor for television and/or movie product released by BBC,Lifetime ,Cartoon Network ,Turner Entertainment Co.,Court TV ,Adult Swim , TNT,National Geographic Society in the U.S., and product from theNBA ,NFL , andNHL .Some early releases were notable for being time-compressed in order to save tape time and money and to compensate for long-playing cassettes being unavailable in the early days of home video. One example was 1978's "Superman" in which the film was released in a 127-minute format, compared to its 143-minute theatrical release.
In the early 1980s, Warner Home Video was the U.S. distributor for the
Mr. Men and Little Miss video series.Warner Bros. began to branch out into the videodisc market, licensing titles to MCA
DiscoVision and RCA'sSelectaVision videodisc formats, allowing both companies to market and distribute the films under their labels. By1985 , Warner was releasing material under their own label in both formats.Warner also experimented with the "rental-only" market for videos, a method also used by
20th Century Fox for their first release of "" in1982 . Two known films released in this manner were "Superman II " and "Excalibur".In
1997 , Warner Home Video was one of the first major American distributors for the newDVD format, by releasing "Twister" on DVD. Warner executiveWarren Lieberfarb is often seen as "the father of DVD".In the UK, WHV distributes most of the DVD releases of Icon Entertainment International, and also distributes Icon releases in Australia and Equinox Films releases in Canada.
In
2000 , WHV was given theNorth America distribution rights forBBC Video titles, where as previously they were distributed byCBS-Fox from the 1980s to the late 1990s. Many CBS/Fox releases of BBC Video titles were reissued under the WHV label, first onVHS and nowDVD . This partnership between WHV and BBC Video continues to this day.In 2006, WHV announced they would enter the market of releasing original
direct-to-video films, a market that has proven lucrative for studios over the past few years, and which has for the most part been dominated bySony Pictures Home Entertainment . They announced much of their output would be followups to films that had done well at the box office theatrically, but wouldn't be expected to do well if a sequel were to be made. The first release under theWarner Premiere banner is theprequel "".On
September 26 2006 , WHV became the first company to street a title in three formats on the same day and date with the home release of "The Lake House" onDVD ,Blu-ray andHD DVD . With Paramount Home Entertainment switching from neutral in the high definition video camp to solely to HD DVD in September 2007, Warner Home Video was now at the time the only major distributor to support both high definition formats, though this changed at the end of May 2008. From June 2008, Warner Home Video released new high definition content onBlu-ray only. [http://www.timewarner.com/corp/newsroom/pr/0,20812,1700383,00.html]They also licensed "
Appleseed EX Machina ", the sequel to the cult anime film Appleseed.ADV Films will produce the dub.Also, for a number of years from the 1980s to the late 1990s, WHV was the distributor for
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer video titles.United Artists films were released on video by WHV in the UK until the early 1990sExternal links
* [http://www.warnervideo.com Official website]
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