Cholentpot
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- Oct 26, 2015
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Alaris was bought last summer for millions by a private investment firm in California. I assume they did their homework and expect to make money from it. I also suspect it was the new owners who told Eastman to stop selling movie film that's converted to still film by third parties or they will sue for damages in court for violation of their contract with Eastman. It;s that contract that keeps Alaris in business. Without it, they'd have to fold their company.
Investment firms tend to drive businesses into the ground trying to flail every drop of cash out of it before leaving a deflated corpse behind. I don't trust they know what they're doing. They see a short term opportunity to make some quick cash off what is seen as a flash in the pan trend. Unless there's someone in there who's a die hard film shooter I don't see this ending well. The bottom line is all that counts. Death by bean counting.
You don't really know what Eastman would do without Alaris contract. They could use other middlemen who already distribute competitors' films to stores around the world. If that happened, the prices might be cheaper to final users as us.
I once held exclusive distribution rights in NYC for a piece of computerized control equipment. After successfully selling for three years, the manufacturer decided to open a branch office in NYC and ended my license. Live and learn. I should have had a better contract; my fault. Without the contract, Eastman could do the same.
I mean imagine if Eastman Kodak sold out their door film. Set up a shop in Rochester, I'd make a pilgrimage there once a year to stock up on cheap film, bad batches and short ends. I worked on campus a while back, they had massive storage that used to be used just for batches that were slightly off. These would be kicked into storage and then recycled for the silver and other stuff. Imagine now if they made a batch of Gold 200 and the speed was off or there was a color hue, instead of trashing it they could just do a funky rebrand limited release and the consumers would eat it up.