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Movie studio launches trial of online movie delivery

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Posted 7:54AM on Thursday 21st February 2002 ( 22 years ago )
LOS ANGELES - Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. on Wednesday launched an online movie delivery pilot, marking the first time a major Hollywood studio has offered consumers feature film downloads over the Internet.<br> <br> MGM has teamed with CinemaNow Inc., an Internet cinema distributor, for a 30-day trial that features two motion pictures.<br> <br> &#34;The idea is to throw it out there and see what happens,&#34; said Stacey Studebaker, a spokeswoman for MGM Home Entertainment in Santa Monica.<br> <br> MGM and several other leading studios already &#34;stream&#34; some of their films over the Internet. But this endeavor will also give consumers the option of downloading copy-protected digital video files.<br> <br> The downloads will offer higher quality playback but be programmed to prevent copying and will be playable for only 24 hours.<br> <br> Hollywood faces daunting challenges in determining how it might deliver movies to consumers over the Internet.<br> <br> Slow connections are the least of them. It takes nearly 25 hours to download a 90-minute film using a dial-up modem and more than four hours with a broadband connection. But compression and delivery technologies are constantly improving.<br> <br> The biggest obstacle is the threat of piracy.<br> <br> As part of the trial, MGM will test CinemaNow billing and security software. Not only will customers be limited to a 24-hour viewing window in the MGM test, but Electronic locks in the software will be tested.<br> <br> MGM will be anxious to see whether hackers succeed in bypassing the security software.<br> <br> The studio had earlier partnered with four other Hollywood studios to distribute films online. But Movielink and a second industry venture, Movies.com, have run into problems, including an antitrust probe by the Justice Department.<br> <br> MGM is testing the waters cautiously with its latest venture. Of the two films the studio is putting forward, one was a box-office flop. The other has already been gathering dust in home video for years.<br> <br> &#34;What&#39;s the Worst that Could Happen?&#34; was a critically savaged comedy starring Martin Lawrence and Danny DeVito. It cost about $45 million to make and only earned $32 million before debuting on video in December.<br> <br> &#34;The Man in the Iron Mask&#34; rode star Leonardo DiCaprio&#39;s &#34;Titanic&#34; success to a modest $57 million box-office success in 1998 but has been out on home video for nearly three years.<br> <br> MGM and CinemaNow will charge from $1.99 to $5.99 to view each film, depending on the connection speed and whether a viewer opts to stream or download the content from CinemaNow&#39;s site.<br> <br> CinemaNow, based in Marina del Rey, is controlled by Lions Gate Entertainment.<br> <br> Shares of MGM were down 70 cents, or 3.7 percent, to close at $17.79 on the New York Stock Exchange on Wednesday. <br> <br>

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