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Author
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Topic: Going to setup a faux 6.1 setup...help?
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Aaron Garman
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1470
From: Toledo, OH USA
Registered: Mar 2003
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posted 11-06-2003 01:25 AM
Hello all. At my college, I am involved with a film club and for our last event of the year we are going to have a Lord of the Rings festival. Part of this will consist of viewing the extended edition DVD's. For this special event, I have elected to setup my home theater system. However, since I will have a good size room at the school, I'd like to use more than two surrounds. I have extra speakers and amps to make this possible. I was thinking about doing the THX setup: 2 side surrounds and 2 back surrounds. Now, all I have is a 5.1 reciever but I have preouts for all channels. Now to my knowledge, I can send the info from the LR surrounds to a separate prologic reciever (I also have) and set it to 3 channel prologic to create a faked Surround EX. This would equal 3 surrounds total: LS, CS, and RS. Now, is there a way to use 2 speakers on the CS with this particular setup? Even if this is not possible, can I merely have 4 surrounds total (2 for LS and 2 for RS)? How would I wire such a system? Thanks for the help everyone.
AJG
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Aaron Garman
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1470
From: Toledo, OH USA
Registered: Mar 2003
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posted 11-07-2003 02:17 AM
Would students in this case still constitue public? The event is for students, not the general public. This was not my area to look into, but as far as I've been told by the others in the group, we are able to do this legally.
EDIT: It is also not just to watch either. One main purpose is to encourage the students who attend to take a look at the films from an academic, philosophical, and possibly religious point of view. Again, we are inviting someone to speak at the event about such topics in relation to the films. It's not about just watching Lord of the Rings to watch it, but to read into it, analyze it, interpret it, and discuss it from an academic perspective. Again, as far as I've been told, we are legally able to do this in the university setting.
AJG
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Scott Norwood
Film God
Posts: 8146
From: Boston, MA. USA (1774.21 miles northeast of Dallas)
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 11-07-2003 11:13 AM
Sounds like a legal grey area. The US law has a provision for "fair use," which would include, for example, the showing of a film within the context of a class being taught at a school or college. In that case, the professor could show a film (or xerox a book, play a recording, etc.) without having to license the material. In your case, you would probably be better off renting the film/tape/DVD/whatever through Swank, which would give you a license for public performance (and would allow you to charge admission). Even if it isn't strictly necessary, it's likely that New Line can afford better lawyers than your film club can, so it isn't worth taking the risk. The real problem is that you are inviting all members of the campus community, not just those enrolled in a particular class, to attend the screening.
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Jeffry L. Johnson
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 809
From: Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Registered: Apr 2000
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posted 11-07-2003 02:37 PM
This IS a public performance and you must obtain the proper non-theatrical clearances for you presentation.
Even a dorm movie night or frat movie night is a public performance that needs a non-theatrical license.
Swank College Guide Legal Liability
Remember, any public showing - even videocassettes - requires a license.
The motion picture titles listed for college use by Swank Motion Pictures, Inc. are cleared by our studios for public performance exhibition by our customers. This means our customers have the legal right to show these titles before groups of students, faculty and their friends on their campuses. The "home use" versions of these same titles, obtained from video stores, retailers, etc., are not cleared for public performance use by colleges, schools, etc. because proper licensing fees to the copyright owners have not been paid for such use. Swank pays these royalties for you. For more information on "Copyrights" contact your Swank Account Executive.
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Pete Lawrence
Expert Film Handler
Posts: 192
From: Middleburg, PA
Registered: Aug 1999
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posted 12-02-2003 10:55 AM
You can get away with the Fair Use loop hole if you show short clips, maybe 10 minutes or so, in an educational setting, but showing the whole film IS a public performance and should be treated as such. You most likely could get away with showing it for 50 of your "closest friends" in a dorm, but do you really want to take the chance? Showings on campus have been shut down in the past when word got out, and the results of an infringement suit aren't pretty.
Here are a few links offering opinions: Link 1 Link 2 Link 3 Link 4
On the other hand, many colleges have a blanket license that does allow certain film showings and music performance. Check it out with whoever handles the on campus theater or AV systems.
Criterion has the non-theatrical distribution of the LOTR series, not Swank. Criterion USA The first two films will cost you around $250 each. The third, when it's available March 17th will be around $1200. That's no typo, it's really $1200. We have been renting them as they come out for a local Sci-Fi convention held on a college campus. I do films for the convention. Shameless plug follows. I-CON Science Fiction [ 12-02-2003, 04:34 PM: Message edited by: Pete Lawrence ]
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