Microsoft has shown off some all-new, mildly pointless features for HD-DVD in its latest gambit in the HD format wars. With the release of
Freedom, a Japanese straight-to-DVD animé movie, the format will get its first online-compatible release, with more to come with the HD-DVD release of Frank Miller's
300, and the Leonardo DiCaprio vehicle,
Blood Diamond.
Freedom's online functionality will include an HD trailer for another movie as well as additional menu styles and additional subtitles.
Slightly more interesting will be the option to re-edit 300 when it gets its North American release on July 31st. In a demonstration on Friday Microsoft's Kevin Collins, a director in the Microsoft Consumer Media Technology Group (A.K.A. "director of HD DVD evangelism"), showed off how owners of
300 on HD-DVD can re-jig the order of the scenes and upload their new edit to a Warner Bros server. The edit will then be accessible to others who can download it to their player and watch it.
300 will be available on Blu-ray, but without the online features.
Similarly, when
Blood Diamond (which is already available on Blu-ray) gets released, owners will be able to participate in online polls after watching the film.
Collins managed to get a crafty dig in at the PS3 while discussing the rival formats. Discussing
Blockbuster's recent choice to focus on the Sony-backed Blu-ray format, he suggested that figures for Blu-ray movie sales are currently artificially inflated by PS3 owners buying films due to the lack of games available to the platform. "We've sold more players, which is what studios are really looking at," he said.
SPOnG is somewhat underwhelmed by this new raft of features. Is there any particular reason that the online features of
Freedom can't be included
on the DVD? Are people so bloody lazy that they can't be bothered turning on their computer to post in online polls about
Blood Diamond? The editing features of
300 are a bit more interesting, but unlikely to appeal to those who aren't hardcore film buffs.
For all the talk of functionality in terms of Blu-ray and HD-DVD, studio support is still the most compelling reason to pick one format over the other, and SPOnG is dubious as to whether format is influencing anyone's platform choices in the world of gaming. SPOnG has to ask: is Microsoft getting desperate in its pimping of HD-DVD? Answers in the Forum, please.