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Hi and belated welcome to the forums, Matthew!
I'm afraid Manga Films is a Spanish bootleg label. The ZonaDVD site you've linked to is ok for tech specs, but routinely reviews boots as if they're legit releases. To save yourself future grief, have a look at this checklist.
There are usually no proper, up-to-date studio logos or copyright credits anywhere on the discs or sleeves.
Pirate copies very rarely contain any extras but when they do it’s even rarer they’ll consist of anything substantial or officially unavailable.
M (1931) Films sans Frontières French pirate Blu-ray rear. As well as a lack of lossless audio and extra features, note the absence of region coding and proper studio, copyright or restoration credits.
Matthew_B_Harrah wrote:Given that the British people finally did the right thing and left the EU, does that effect the copyrights now?
Matthew_B_Harrah wrote:M (1931) Films sans Frontières French pirate Blu-ray rear. As well as a lack of lossless audio and extra features, note the absence of region coding and proper studio, copyright or restoration credits.
What do you mean by "region coding"? Because it seems to be right under the Blu-ray logo. Not meaning to argue, just kind of confused when seeing/reading that.
It means they are not region locking the discs.
James-Masaki_Ryan wrote:None of that here, Matthew.
Matthew, you're the only one who has this release in hand
Based off the first part of your article, that I read so far. There are at least two things that suggest this shouldn't be a bootleg:
There are usually no proper, up-to-date studio logos or copyright credits anywhere on the discs or sleeves.
There is a copyright on the bottom, granted you'll have to squint given the resolution of the site's image, but it's there.
http://www.zonadvd.com/modules.php?name ... e&sid=3900
Pirate copies very rarely contain any extras but when they do it’s even rarer they’ll consist of anything substantial or officially unavailable.
This carries at least two 'substantial' extras:
Audio Commentary by film critic Antonio José Navarro
“Everything about Kong” featurette (34:23) [narrated by Antonio José Navarro]
The 1980s colorized version was done on SD videotape from an SD source. The best quality transfer for it is on the DVDs I added to the database. It can't look any better than on those.
I also covered the fact that even bootlegs sometimes (but rarely) contain extras, even specially created ones. It stands to reason it's worth the bootleggers making some effort for potentially the most profitable film they could release. The two new extras are an audio commentary by an unknown Spanish blogger and a photo gallery narrated by the same person. Sound fishy much? Kong, as you well know, has a ton of brilliant extras already, by world renowned critics and historians, so why not just use those? Because they're relatively recent, obviously under copyright and if sued, the bootleggers can't claim ignorance in thinking they're PD.
Have I answered your questions satisfactorily, Matthew?
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