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  • Hundreds of your Warner Bros DVDs probably don’t work anymore

    lurch234

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    • 3 comments
    • 190 views
    • 4 minutes

    Due to the way WB manufactured their DVDs, virtually all discs pressed between 2006-8 are unplayable now.

     
    By Chris Bumbray
    March 1st 2025, 9:02am

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    I’m a huge fan of old movies. Now, when I say old I don’t mean movies from ten, twenty, or even thirty or forty years ago.

     

    I love movies from the Golden Age of Hollywood, specifically the 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s. I’ve always loved this period, and given how hard it is to find many of these movies on streaming, I’ve made an effort to buy as many of these movies on physical media as possible.

     

    As such, I have thousands of old movies on DVD, and among my most treasured titles are a few dozen DVD box sets Warner Bros put out in the mid-2000s, as they control the best library of classic film.

     

    A few months ago, I dug into an old Humphrey Bogart box set to watch a favorite of mine, Passage to Marseille. After about an hour, the disc simply stopped working. The same thing happened with another movie from the set, Across the Pacific. I actually thought my old Blu-ray player was to blame, and given that I was in need of an upgrade anyway, I bought a new UHD player and just forgot about it.

     

    Flash forward to about a week ago, when I decided to throw on an old Errol Flynn movie called Desperate Journey. The same thing happened. This was more concerning to me, as, unlike the other movies I mentioned, this has never gotten an HD release and was unavailable digitally. I did a little research online, and to my horror, I landed on several home theater forum threads (and a couple of good videos) confirming this was no fluke.

     

    It turns out that virtually every Warner Bros DVD disc manufactured between 2006 and 2008 has succumbed to the dreaded laser rot, where discs simply stop working due to a rotting of the layers. Once it happens, it can’t be undone. This was a frequent problem with laserdiscs back in the 80s and 90s, but it wasn’t a huge problem with DVDs. The issue comes down to the way the discs were authored. Many of the titles affected, which range from classics like The Wild Bunch and The Shawshank Redemption to TV collections like The Dukes of Hazzard, have been reissued on Blu-ray or digital HD. Some of the titles, such as many of the titles in the Looney Tunes

     

    Collections and many of the Golden Age of Hollywood movies, have not, making them, in a lot of cases, lost media.

     

    So, what can be done about this? Nothing. As stated in this RetroBlasting video, we had ticking time bombs on our hands, and the only way around the problem was to rip our faves to something like PLEX, but it’s too late for the majority of discs. Warner Bros, of course, has yet to comment on this, so people like me have thousands of worthless discs cluttering our shelves. Here’s the most comprehensive list of titles available.

     

    So far, Blu-ray Discs aren’t affected, although all HD-DVD discs put out by WB in this period are basically expensive coasters.

     

    While it would be great of WB was to try to make good to consumers by at least offering us replacement MOD discs from the Warner Archive, I’m not holding my breath. Given that the discs only went bad after fifteen years or so, I’m sure they feel like we got our money’s worth – which we certainly didn’t in my opinion. Special shout out to Damn Fool Idealistic Crusader, a superb Home Theater YouTube Channel that was way ahead of this story. 

     

    UPDATE: According to one of our readers, FilmFan-89, WB will replace some discs if you contact them directly, with a catch. They will only replace discs that are currently in print, and sadly, many of the defective titles are not.

     

    Reach out to them through the WB Store and keep us posted in the comment thread if they come through with replacements.

     

    What do you think of this problem? Let us know in the comments!

     

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    Hmm... I have a fair number of DVDs from that list. All boxed up since they've all been ripped to HDD, or downloaded because it's easier to do that.

     

    And yes, a great reason to 'pirate' even your own copies which, despite the movie companies' protests, is actually legal in the UK. Amazingly, our law says we are allowed to make a backup copy of any media that we own.

     

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    Hi,

    just some idea... if I was you I would get the missing bits and bytes ( I don´t want to discuss, where you will get it from and actually think it´s against the board rules, no? . I just trust you can do it ) and save it on a hard drive.
    Now, collectors might not like hand-written CD´s / DVD´s, but there is a solution as well if this is your hobby and you wanna spend some money.
    The screenshot I attached is just to show you it does exist, I dont know if Epson is good or which machine is best, you have to research yoursel!

    So you can buy a CD / DVD printer. Maybe there is a company which will do that for you in your area as well. (online or locally).
    Another possibility is to reach out to forums and ask. I can guarantee you, there will be always someone who bought a professional DVD printer, even when it was 3K....  maybe they will print you some for a small fee...

    If I had a huge DVD collection, I would backup every single medium digitally, store it with WinRar and give it a good amount of recovery data (I would not select compress, I would just do store option).

    Put the rotten DVD´s in a case and the backup ones in my original cases, aka collection.
    If everything is optimal, you can´t even see the difference between original and backup, only if you look at the back side the laser reads from.

    This is what I would do, if I had the money and passion for it. Good luck!

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    Edited by Sarah Kraft
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