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In 2003, Warner Home Video became the first home video releasing company to release movies only on DVD with no VHS equivalent. Warner Bros. Home Entertainment logo used as corporate logo from 2017 until 2019. In 2009, Warner Home Video introduced the Warner Archive Collection, which allows the public to order custom-made DVDs of rarely seen ...
Warner Home Video released the film on VHS, DVD, and LaserDisc on March 11, 1997. [30] The VHS tape was reprinted and re-released through Warner Home Video's catalog promotions: The Warner Bros. 75th Anniversary Celebration (1998), Century Collection (1999), Century 2000 (2000) and Warner Spotlight (2001). The film was re-released on DVD on ...
March 27, 1997: A Rat's Tale: Germany with Warner Bros. Family Entertainment; co-production with Augsburger Puppenkiste and Monty Film April 7, 1997: Mijn Franse tante Gazeuse: Netherlands with Warner Bros. Family Entertainment; distribution only; produced by Bos Bros. Film & TV Productions and AVRO: October 2, 1997: The Fearless Four: Germany
MGM/UA Home Video (1982–1998) MGM/UA Home Entertainment (1998-2005) UA (Specials) Cannon Video (1985–1995) Embassy Home Entertainment (1982–1998) Samuel Goldwyn Home Entertainment (1982–1997) Orion Home Video (1987–1998) Filmways Home Video (1988–1989) Streamline Video (1990–1994) Studio Distribution Services (Warner Bros.) (2021 ...
In 1990, with the 75th anniversary of Universal Studios, it became MCA/Universal Home Video and used that name alternating with the MCA Home Video name from 1990 until 1997. On December 9, 1996, the company was renamed as Universal Studios Home Video when MCA was reincorporated as Universal Studios, which would then later be merged into Vivendi ...
This is a list of the best-selling film titles sold in the United States across all physical home video formats, including VHS ... Warner Home Video: March 7, 2006 ...
On sites like eBay and LoveAntiques, collectible VHS tapes are valued at upwards of nearly $10,000 - depending on the rarity and condition of the tape, of course.
The PolyGram libraries (which included the Epic film library) would be placed under Orion Pictures, so as to avoid its 1990 home video distribution agreement with Warner Home Video. [10] In March 1999, MGM paid $225 million to end its distribution contract with Warner Home Video, effectively ending the distribution problem (the initial deal was ...