![]() The "others" are also the second tier people who depend on a film to be released for their livelihoods. The "others" are those people who put in 10 to 14 hour days over the course of a couple of years creating a movie. ![]() While these folks gloat about having seen a film early (and illegally), I'm sure they don't think about the impact their cumulative actions have on others. I suppose that for some, the idea of seeing a movie before it's actually released to the public is some sort of thrill (or something). Sure we might grumble at the studios, but who is really to blame? With the number of folk who have access to a post-production version of a movie, when do the necessary additional security measures kick in that studios may have to take? Will those measures cost us, the fan, more in the end? ![]() Does that really matter? There are so many different people that handle a DVD of a movie in post-production before it hits the theaters, it's amazing we don't see this more often.
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