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Movie makers back D-VHS format

D-VHS offers tapes with 44GB or 4 hours of capacity and gives owners of high-definition TV sets the option of recording and watching high-quality video.
Written by Richard Shim, Contributor
Four movie studios will start releasing films on the secure version of a new digital videotape format called D-VHS.

Artisan Entertainment, DreamWorks SKG, Twentieth Century Fox and Universal Studios said Wednesday that they will use JVC's D-Theater, the version of D-VHS that cannot be copied.

D-VHS is not meant to compete with DVD or VHS, both of which are designed for the mass market. Instead, the D-VHS format and its players offer owners of high-definition TV sets the option of recording and watching high-quality video. D-VHS players can also use VHS tapes.

Steve Feldstein, a Twentieth Century Fox spokesman, said he expects the format to coexist with VHS and DVD by serving a niche market of videophiles.

D-VHS tapes, which offer a 44GB capacity, can record and play four hours worth of shows from high-definition televisions.

"HDTV owners have had little to no content that takes advantage of what their televisions can do," Feldstein said. "D-Theater offers picture quality that is up to four times better than what's already out there."

Feldstein added that the first movies that Twentieth Century Fox will release with the D-Theater format are action titles such as "Die Hard" and "X-Men."

HDTV, which supports wide-screen viewing comparable to that found on a movie theater screen, offers up to 1,080 lines of resolution and 5.1 channel Dolby Digital surround sound.

JVC has had a $1,999 D-Theater player on the market since September; movies are expected to be in the $30 to $40 range when they start hitting the market in the middle of the year.

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