Video World - The Death of a Video Store (Video Store Documentary)

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2014
  • Video World is like other movie rental stores. It's the best place in town to discover new films. It also went out of business. Documentary filmmaker Ben Churchill returns to his hometown of Woodbury, Connecticut to capture the store's final weeks and celebrate the dying culture of local video stores.
    Trailer: • Video World - Trailer ...
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Комментарии • 781

  • @masterboby1
    @masterboby1 8 лет назад +327

    i didn't know that in 15 minutes i could find myself so attached to a store and then feel sad when the last day arrived

    • @Gabelite
      @Gabelite 8 лет назад +4

      +masterboby1 IKR :(

    • @DebonairOfTheWind
      @DebonairOfTheWind 8 лет назад +5

      same here. :(

    • @Bricksquad32ent
      @Bricksquad32ent 7 лет назад +3

      masterboby1 facts

    • @12we34be
      @12we34be 7 лет назад +9

      Yeah. I didn't even step foot in that video store and I miss it because of this video. This makes me somewhat dislike technological advances.

    • @bookreaderson
      @bookreaderson 7 лет назад +2

      well said

  • @Hrithmus
    @Hrithmus 7 лет назад +255

    I'm 31 now and this documentary really hit home. I remember when i was about 6 (So this would have been around 1990) we had a local video store my dad took me to. They had Video Game rentals. I would spend hours just picking each game up and looking on the back to find the video game that looked the coolest. When we would go to check out they had a Popcorn machine always going in the back and you could smell the popcorn, was amazing. I would also see my friends sometimes in the store at the same time. Even some kids i never met before. One kid (Name was Jason) was a local kid and i never seen him around. He was at the video store and we got to talking, picked up some video games and went back to my house to play. Long Story short i was in his wedding last year and have been friends for 20+ years now.
    I also remember this older lady would always give me a free bag of popcorn when i would use my dads card to rent video games or movies. I would walk home with my video game or movie and was sooooo excited. I have 3 kids now and my oldest is 6. The same exact age as i was when my dad took me to my first local video store. Sadly we have nothing like that in our area. He has no clue what a video store even is or that magic of a local video store. That magic is hard to explain.
    Anyway, sorry for the long comment. Very good Documentary.

    • @ladieslatenight3834
      @ladieslatenight3834 5 лет назад +9

      Omg U just spoke what i feel about video stores. Im 32 and i always felt the magic going inside. Im soo soo sad that even in berlin they close one after another..
      :(

    • @23Nemesis
      @23Nemesis 5 лет назад +8

      Great story. I also have very fond memories of going to the video store with my father. I am a little older than you so I remember the days when they were VHS and Beta tapes for rent as well as 8-bit Nintendo games. My mom and dad were separated so every weekend my dad would pick me and my little sister up and I remember being so excited cuz I knew our first stop was the neighborhood video store. There was usually a 3 movies for $5 deal and we each got to pick one movie each and just as you described it it was a very magical experience especially looking back at it now. I remember renting classics such as the first Terminator movie alongside RoboCop, Rambo, Top Gun, Goonies, Back to the Future and A Nightmare on Elm Street just to name a few. Come to think of it my first job as a 14 year old kid was in my uncle's video store. I was responsible for putting the chips back under the display box. The chips that customers would have to take to the counter to rent their movies. perhaps that is one of the reasons why I have a place in my heart for old local video stores. Those sure were the good old days..

    • @imnotabin
      @imnotabin 5 лет назад

      i've never been to a video store, but they seemed so cool

    • @letsresethumanity1983
      @letsresethumanity1983 5 лет назад +1

      That was the best comment I've ever have been reading. A real compliment to the documentary 👏

    • @edwardjames6023
      @edwardjames6023 4 года назад +1

      Awwee! Your video store story is what brought tears to my eyes. So beautiful.

  • @deadbydawn93
    @deadbydawn93 10 лет назад +134

    R.I.P to all video stores everywhere.

    • @auranit
      @auranit 10 лет назад +2

      there are still a few, I rented from one today

    • @deadbydawn93
      @deadbydawn93 10 лет назад +5

      I think that book stores on their way out now, which is sad.

    • @mmandmcb14
      @mmandmcb14 4 года назад +1

      @CHRISTOPHER LEE I made advertistments for starting your own video library.

    • @Biotyn
      @Biotyn 4 года назад +2

      Family video has over 7 hundred stores and is still thriving

    • @lucyoriginales
      @lucyoriginales 4 года назад +2

      There’s always hope if you open a coffee shop ☕️ 🤭🥰💕💋❤️

  • @techstyle123
    @techstyle123 8 лет назад +65

    I used to go to our local video shop...used to rent a game and a film and get some treats on a Saturday night was the best times cool documentary

    • @edwardjames6023
      @edwardjames6023 4 года назад

      What do you do now?

    • @lazarusblackwell6988
      @lazarusblackwell6988 3 года назад +1

      I used to go to the video store to rent out some SEGA games.It was always an adventure and a meaningful thing to do.Im sad that they all went out of business :( New isnt always better.If you take out the fun out of everything then everything loses its meaning.

  • @dragonbillylee4781
    @dragonbillylee4781 4 года назад +19

    I miss those days, you just can't beat physically holding and choosing a videotape! The artwork, reading the back, talking to the staff - unbeatable!

    • @FloridaMan69.
      @FloridaMan69. 4 года назад +3

      Don't forget that movie rental store smell

  • @halfwen4575
    @halfwen4575 Год назад +8

    Wow, an 8 year old documentary about a video store thousands of miles away from me has me all up in my feelings

  • @aaronrobinson3371
    @aaronrobinson3371 9 лет назад +47

    That has to be a rough transition, from owning your own business, to working a shitty customer service job at a grocery store.

    • @chris-hayes
      @chris-hayes 7 лет назад +3

      yeah I felt bad, he deserves more

    • @jamesdurnford739
      @jamesdurnford739 6 лет назад +3

      I still rent movies from my local Library and I won't stop

    • @chipbuttytime3396
      @chipbuttytime3396 2 года назад +4

      I get the impression if he is helping customers he is a happy man, whether they are his or another businesses

    • @sliat1981
      @sliat1981 Месяц назад

      Well he has to work after that massive financial loss

  • @movieunycorn9105
    @movieunycorn9105 3 года назад +15

    I hope Ed is doing well today. He seemed like one of the nicest guys and it was sad to see his passion get taken away by the times

  • @adamtylermiller
    @adamtylermiller 8 лет назад +35

    I will never forget the smell of those old mom and pop video stores. There's nothing like it. Like many of these folks, I'd get off work at 10, and Showtime Video would sometimes stay open late looking for me. I'd grab 2 or 3 movies, stay up until 3 or 4am watching them all, take them back, and then start again. It's where I first began really appreciating film, directing, production, sfx, and cinematography. I remember the clerk telling me, "I wouldn't recommend that movie, it sucks....it's in black and white". Clerks, to this day, is my favorite Kevin Smith movie:)

    • @VideoCop
      @VideoCop 7 лет назад +1

      I used to rent so many wrestling tapes from Hollywood Video. That and I loved their "Cult Classic" section

    • @adamtylermiller
      @adamtylermiller 7 лет назад

      Oh man, I never got a chance to really rent the PPVs (save for Wrestlemania 6). I watched every single wrestling video they had in the store at least 10 times as a kid.

  • @musgrave6886
    @musgrave6886 9 лет назад +34

    token reminders of a bygone era: telephone booths, small town malls, neighborhood bookstores/gift shops/emporiums, record stores, video stores...a day spent in these cultural signposts truly involved time, effort & money...but it was all worth it for being much more meaningful & satisfying as an individual/communal experience...*sigh*...life was so much simpler then...why did those days ever have to go?...

    • @jwgreek8606
      @jwgreek8606 8 лет назад +2

      Amen

    • @michaelcurtis5844
      @michaelcurtis5844 8 лет назад +4

      Damn, how i feel sorry for the teenagers of today. What are they going to be nostalgia about. It is not like streaming movies on your phone is going to be replaced anytime.

    • @Danbo22987
      @Danbo22987 3 года назад +2

      Book stores are still a thing

    • @poppycock31185
      @poppycock31185 2 года назад +3

      They went because people are sheep.
      If enough people carried on using those things then they would still be around. Unfortunately most people follow the path society dictates.

    • @zerosoma33
      @zerosoma33 8 месяцев назад +2

      I still watch DVDs every night

  • @Psilocybin77
    @Psilocybin77 3 года назад +12

    What a deep and emotional connection we feel to these monuments of a bygone era. When I was a kid my favourite place in the world was this VHS rental store and arcade, next to a pizza place. We'd rent all the eighties classics there, movies I shouldn't have seen at that age. I will never forget the smell and feel of that place.

    • @fft9917
      @fft9917 3 года назад +2

      Same here. I rented every cult/obscure horror flick I could. Still miss Delmar Video.

  • @bedroom6141
    @bedroom6141 8 лет назад +56

    Now I'm crying... thanks Ben! This brought back so many wonderful memories of the 80s and 90s. Going to the video store was my favorite thing to do as a kid, and as an adult I am still a cinephile. I wish new technology could exist along with the old, instead of replacing it. My kids will never know what going out and renting movies was like, and it makes me really sad.

  • @jamespeter2450
    @jamespeter2450 8 лет назад +43

    we are closing our store this year after 34 years. I have owned it for the past 19 years. it will be a sad but we are going to out in style just like this have a big party on the last day. thanks for this.

    • @Sunny-uh5bc
      @Sunny-uh5bc 7 лет назад +2

      James Peter blessed be you, sir. May God be with you, and your family.

    • @bostonbruinsfan247
      @bostonbruinsfan247 4 года назад +5

      Video stores will make a come back. Some are still out there, since dvd and bluray are still circulating out therr. Should have held on to your store.

  • @pepperj
    @pepperj 8 лет назад +27

    In my early 20's, I would get high as a kite and go to the local video store that was open 24/7. Ken's world of video. Miss those days. I'd spend a good 2 hours just looking at vhs/dvd covers. Then I'd rent the most god awful movie, take it home and fall asleep during the opening credits. The good ol days

    • @pepperj
      @pepperj 4 года назад

      Jamal Greasy Hell yea me too! I still have a few laying around

    • @fft9917
      @fft9917 3 года назад +1

      Same here. The store I went to sadly closed in 2015. The massive collection of cult/obscure horror was so great. Still miss it.

    • @pepperj
      @pepperj 3 года назад

      @@fft9917 was it the Addison one? I would go there and bensenville

  • @schmitley
    @schmitley 7 лет назад +8

    Who knew a documentary on a video store could be so emotional. But it was. Video stores were about culture and discovery and an experience. Kids today will never know what it feels like to pile into a car with your friends or family and enter a field of video shelves and literally discover movies that you never would of otherwise. So happy I grew up in the Video Store era. Awesome job on this man.

  • @jwgreek8606
    @jwgreek8606 8 лет назад +25

    The guy at 5:02: Dude! TV stations have been putting movies on TV ever since TV first started!

    • @pray4fabe899
      @pray4fabe899 4 года назад +1

      "They try to uh.. knock em out" 😂 he means well tho! lol

    • @mythicalashley9542
      @mythicalashley9542 3 года назад

      I think what he meant was that movies where coming to tv faster then they used when I was a kid new movies didn't come to tv until years after they were made

  • @tonymagona334
    @tonymagona334 8 лет назад +43

    Being in the technology field myself, I notice a lot that my field is a serious double edged sword. Technology has helped with so many advancements and achievements, but it has also taken away so much from us. As I watch this video and I look at one persons comment who said there were people still renting videos and who were unaware of the technological advances, it makes me think at how technology is leaving a large group of people in the past and who ultimately will never catch up.

    • @jwgreek8606
      @jwgreek8606 8 лет назад

      There is still Blockbuster in Alaska.

    • @christyme6395
      @christyme6395 7 лет назад +6

      The Blockbuster in Alaska is "name only" and exists because there are parts of Alaska where quality internet access is still unavailable. IE we don't have a fast enough connection to stream.

    • @christyme6395
      @christyme6395 7 лет назад +3

      I understand about the technology issue. I'm nearly forty and sometimes it's hard to keep up but you have to because once you fall behind you are in a world of hurt in the twenty-first century. As technology causes things to shift you have to shift to, like it or not.

  • @wanghammer
    @wanghammer 7 лет назад +75

    Very well produced.
    Very well edited.
    This production deserves more views; but then again, more views kinda adds ammo to why video stores are out of business today.
    But seriously... nice work.

  • @johnwpowell1955
    @johnwpowell1955 8 лет назад +26

    The weelky trip to the video store from age 6-15 is some of the fondest memories i have of childhood. Me and my cousin always went straight to the horror section and looked for the most lurid box cover we could find, often this resulted in renting completely horrible movies, but fueled on jolt cola and a stack of 4 or 5 vhs's to get through in a weekend marathon, renting a few bad titles didnt matter. boy do I miss those times looking through the racks and racks of obscure horror titles to try and find just the right one. Once in a while we would discover little gems hidden in the horror rack, such as Sleepaway Camp, Evil Dead (1&2&AOD), & Romero flicks.

    • @samuelcolt1505
      @samuelcolt1505 5 лет назад

      Ours had mf tanning beds in the back lol

    • @chrisderidder4087
      @chrisderidder4087 Год назад

      Very true. You wont find these movies on netflix/prime/disney +. The hardcore horror could only be found in the video store

  • @Elegon-nl7uh
    @Elegon-nl7uh 8 лет назад +26

    and then 4k media comes out. without the bandwidth to stream it and we will need video stores again

  • @clogmonkey
    @clogmonkey 8 лет назад +36

    Just watched the whole thing after seeing the link on the Tommy Edison vid. I loved this Ben, it was great seeing the different values and opinions from different people and customers all invested into the same shop.

  • @Quad373
    @Quad373 10 лет назад +9

    I could not stop laughing at 5:24.
    "My husband got HBO"
    "No, Netflix"

    • @jwgreek8606
      @jwgreek8606 8 лет назад +1

      And the guy that said that tv stations are showing movies now. I was like "Dude! They have ever since TV first started!"

    • @jacksong8131
      @jacksong8131 6 дней назад

      I was confused until the little girl corrected her. Video Rental stores are far better than HBO. Video Rental stores you can pick the exact movie you want to see. HBO you had to wait for the movie that would interest you to come in at a certain time.
      Now, ever since DVR's, HBO got even crappier.

  • @schwimdandy3820
    @schwimdandy3820 4 года назад +12

    Remember folks, soon they will be piping videos directly into your TV.

  • @hugogarza1573
    @hugogarza1573 7 лет назад +38

    I miss the video stores :(:(:(

    • @jameslightsey1761
      @jameslightsey1761 6 лет назад

      Me too :-(

    • @kngkrmson2179
      @kngkrmson2179 4 года назад

      Digital services killed the video stores..😬

    • @Biotyn
      @Biotyn 4 года назад

      @@kngkrmson2179 nope, family video still has 750 stores and is thriving

    • @lazarusblackwell6988
      @lazarusblackwell6988 3 года назад

      Mee too :( :(

    • @lazarusblackwell6988
      @lazarusblackwell6988 3 года назад

      We all just sit around in our homes today feeling depressed with nothing to do.Going out to the video store was a life saver.

  • @Dan-or5cu
    @Dan-or5cu 10 лет назад +13

    One of the best docos I've ever seen. So sad to see video stores dying.

  • @VideoCop
    @VideoCop 7 лет назад +116

    What I don't understand, is how people don't understand that Netflix/streaming is NOT a viable replacement for rental stores. Without bringing my own personal qualms about streaming services (which i do use and like)...but with Netflix/Hulu/Prime, a lot of movie titles are repeated across those network. On top of that, half the titles are crappy straight to video stuff that came out in the last few years, and then we are limited on which new movies we can get. For old movies though? Show me where Netflix or Redbox has offered obscure movies like the Garbage Pail Kids or Mac & Me? Show me where Netflix or Redbox has that obscure horror film from 1983 that had limited distribution and never made it to DVD?
    Netflix, Redbox, on demand services are great and fine replacements for modern film, but for anything from like the 90s or earlier, it's not a good replacement. We are secluded to watch something that Netflix has in their current database. I'm curious what it will be like 10-20 years from now. Will those obscure VHS only titles make their way to some digital format? Even if/when they do, people growing up in today's generation of cinema probably won't care because they will be too distracted by the 12th installment of the Hunger Games or Captain America part 9.

    • @Ginupseed
      @Ginupseed 7 лет назад +6

      VideoCop True. Blockbuster is still around just with a lot less stores. 15 . Most of which are in alaska. Hollywood video is gone. The only video store left in my state that i know of is Family video. I loved going to blockbuster as a kid . having friday movie nights with sushi ( in middle school). Use to get pokemon movies, and hello kitty. My baby sitter one of her sons worked at one, and gave my bro and I games from there as gifts. I went to hollywood video a few times. But blockbuster was my go to.

    • @Ginupseed
      @Ginupseed 7 лет назад +6

      Mishichige Kaito Just because the movies are old doesn't mean they aren't any good. Plus video rentals have had new movies as soon as they released to dvd. Have you not ever been to one? Because it sounds like you haven't. Just the ignorance.. ugh . Plenty of people love grease, fucking breakfest club. Little mermaid, do I need to list shit?

    • @Ginupseed
      @Ginupseed 7 лет назад +2

      ***** Alright fair enough.

    • @111highgh
      @111highgh 7 лет назад +6

      @VideoCop: Who the fuck wants to watch, Garbage Pail Kids or Mac and Me? How stupid are you?

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack 7 лет назад +6

      The question is how stupid are you that you watch all those fake reality TV shows and Justin Beiber?

  • @EposVox
    @EposVox 7 лет назад +24

    Thanks for this.

    • @unknownwolf4046
      @unknownwolf4046 3 года назад

      I blame Digital version movies like Netflix and hulu

  • @Veganluke
    @Veganluke 8 лет назад +11

    This felt very nostalgic to watch, as I loved going video rental stores as a kid and then the one in my whole time closed down and I was very sad. Video rental stores are something that we still need! Really enjoyed this great little film!

  • @Josxyz74vvTV
    @Josxyz74vvTV 3 года назад +5

    Its sad I remember as a kid a hometown video store that really linked me to my obsession with the 80s despite me being born in the 90s. I hated blockbuster for pushing them out of business but now I miss blockbuster too. The whole video rental experience is something that cannot be replicated today. Even though its so much easier to watch whatever we want now it just doesn't have the same feeling.

    • @danr2652
      @danr2652 8 месяцев назад +1

      It's just a mentality of "look at me I'm a rebel and I hate technology and advancement" but if you ask anyone if they would will get rid of their smart phones and smart devices or even stop buying anything online, they won't do it.

  • @chancebeals7861
    @chancebeals7861 10 месяцев назад +3

    I remember watching this years ago before working at my local Family Video and thinking it’d never happen to them. Even though I wasn’t working there when it shut down, it still pained me to see it go. Some of the best memories I’ll ever have were in that store.

  • @villesanti1
    @villesanti1 9 лет назад +10

    I'm not going to lie, Netflix and other streaming companies are great, but there was something very special of actually going to a videos store and pick up the movies you wanted. I grew up in the VHS era in the 80s and there was no better thing that going to the video club, pick of a few movies, order a pizza and invite a bunch of friends to watch some movies on a Friday night. The great thing about the VHS era is that it brought a bunch of movies that people had never even heard of and it changed the way we enjoyed movies. Great documentary, it is definitely the end of a great era. Video stores, like old cinemas, was about the community, just like the lady said in the doc, "Is not just a video store."

  • @niveknailgun
    @niveknailgun 4 года назад +2

    My mother would shop at a paint and wallpaper store in the same building as a video store, where I would get dropped off at. I spent HOURS in that store and miss it. Great memories where I'd look at images and read the backs of the slip covers, only allowed to choose one each week. Good times.

  • @veronicawest3749
    @veronicawest3749 3 года назад +1

    I miss the video stores so much fun to go walk the rows and have that exciting moment when you find that obscure movie that looked good...

  • @okbouncer24
    @okbouncer24 7 лет назад +4

    Today's generation has no clue as to how magical Blockbuster, Video World was. It was a family experience. The whole family would go in to the store and look around for like 30 minuets till they found what was just right for the night. Reading the back of the box to see how good the movie sounded, the smell of the candy and Popcorn! OH! Also even better going there when a new release would come out and you would go there praying they had a copy and when you got there you ran straight to the new movie section to find that all of the new movies you came in to rent was all rented out. You would be all let down and you would go up to the desk and ask when the next one of the new movies should be dropped off and they would always say anytime so you would stick around nd wait for when someone would drop off their rented movies in high hopes that the movie they returned was one of the new release movie you was waiting for and you always had someone else their waiting as well and it became like a war between you and the other customer! OH! And when you finally did get a copy of the new movie you would go home and get the living room all set up with the fire pace going and the smell of popcorn and Sourpatch kids, put the VHS tape in turn the lights down, sit down and wrap up in a couch blanket with some Domino's Delivered pizza, popcorn and candy and then start the movie on a 32 in Sony Trinitron TV and then watch about 6 trailers to the next new movies up and coming and then hearing the sound of the THX sound Studio's productions and then watching the globe turn for Universal Studio's or Amblin Entertainment and then BOOM! JURASIC PARK!!!! GREMLINS!!!! THE GOONIES!!! AWWW Man! Now that's when movie watching was at it's best. Today???? Just turn your computer on and click the movie you want. As simple as it is today it's not as fun as it was. It never ill be and it's ashamed because today's youth will never know. I miss those day's!!!! How many of you pictured everything I just said???

  • @MrRobertHarding
    @MrRobertHarding 9 лет назад +8

    RIP video rental stores. It is the end of an era. Nice little video. Well done

  • @cocknosedan
    @cocknosedan 7 лет назад +14

    Lots of cute girls in Woodbury Connecticut! Def lots of good memories as a kid looking for movies, wresting videos, and video games at these types of stores. Technology changing everything, but not all is for the better.

  • @jessesteck8381
    @jessesteck8381 8 лет назад +35

    It's funny that the people who were still renting videos there were also the ones who were completely unaware of the technological advances of the last few years.

    • @jwgreek8606
      @jwgreek8606 8 лет назад +12

      Blockbuster is still big in Alaska!

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack 7 лет назад +1

      It will be worth the drive to go see it.

    • @ChrisCooling
      @ChrisCooling 7 лет назад +4

      that was your core customer. The non-early adopter senior citizen or mom that simply wasn't hip to the latest thing. Boy you should have heard the complaining when it was clear VHS was on the way out and they 'would have to' get a DVD player...

    • @hectorespinoza3446
      @hectorespinoza3446 7 лет назад +3

      Lol exactly! That mom says "my husband got HBO" and her 6 year old daughter says its called netflix mom... sad to say but if 90% of those people interviewed knew what netflix was and how easy it worked... they wouldn't even be there to begin with.

    • @Ballerz24
      @Ballerz24 7 лет назад +9

      Jesse Steck it's not that they were unaware! It's that they rather go to a video store to get their movies instead of streaming them online or whatever!

  • @kkiller81
    @kkiller81 7 лет назад +3

    Awesome little documentary. It's so sad that video stores basically don't exist anymore. I grew up hanging out in my local video stores and can't put into words the impact it had on my life.

    • @rainy5517
      @rainy5517 7 месяцев назад

      You're so right ❤ I miss everything of it. Renting video games, we would play at home or movies we would watch...

  • @WilliamC1966
    @WilliamC1966 7 лет назад +1

    Boy did this hit home....seeing this happen in this country is hard on the heart! Excellent film....

  • @Rossturnerphoto
    @Rossturnerphoto 3 года назад +4

    It's sad to watch the closing of a business, especially a family-run business, but it was good that you were there to document it. It's really interesting to watch now in 2020 at a time when streaming has pretty much taken over everything. Nowadays it's easy to reminisce about the good times we had at Blockbuster and forget that Blockbuster itself was the big bad wolf that wiped out a lot of smaller video stores and chains. I do miss video stores in general, but I really miss small family-run places like the one documented in your video. This was a very good documentary.

  • @AlexWeberg
    @AlexWeberg 4 года назад +1

    I miss going into my local blockbuster. Looking through all the different movie and also all the ps2 games I might never own. Back then I didn't have internet so that was it back then. Getting to look at almost every movie and the new releases.

  • @scgs78
    @scgs78 4 года назад +3

    This is so sad! I'm from Buenos Aires, Argentina and i worked at Blockbuster Video for 9 years and almost 1 more year in a local video store. I've been throu this. Closing the store, packing the movies in boxes, send it to another stores, covering the windows with newspapers... Even all the "out of business" thing here. So sad. Luckily i buyed some Blockbuster's furnitures and stuff and i made a mini Block in my house. Pure nostalgia.

  • @42ndStreetMatthew
    @42ndStreetMatthew 7 лет назад

    This was great. Thanks for sharing. Brings back a lot of memories.

  • @dougbadgley6031
    @dougbadgley6031 5 лет назад +1

    I wasn’t ready for this to end. Very well done.

  • @yandman26
    @yandman26 8 лет назад +2

    thank you for making this great doc. I'm a huge fan of vhs and miss the video store , this is so awesome.

  • @AP-yi2qt
    @AP-yi2qt 7 лет назад

    Discovering this film now. Awesome work. Thanks a ton for chronicling this story which is just another piece of our collective experience.

  • @NineInchNailer
    @NineInchNailer 5 лет назад

    What a great, heart-warming documentary! Thanks for making it.

  • @letsresethumanity1983
    @letsresethumanity1983 5 лет назад

    One of the most fantastic documentaries i ever seen! Brings back so many memories. 5/5 for this one 😊

  • @aaronornelas8348
    @aaronornelas8348 8 лет назад +2

    Beautiful documentary, I miss video stores, that used to be my weekend,

  • @paulspydar
    @paulspydar 8 лет назад

    I have watched this a few times now & every time it touches me, The time just seems to fly by, the style is very calm & thoughtful , easy to watch , Thanks very much.

  • @groovypudding7173
    @groovypudding7173 8 лет назад

    Sad to see another video store close but such a well done documentary. Thanks for sharing.

  • @jbturk
    @jbturk 10 лет назад

    Great stuff. Thanks so much for this, Ben.

  • @platypuswhat
    @platypuswhat 9 месяцев назад +1

    Bless this man for being so grateful. He's smiling on the last day of business, and right after saying he fully expected the business to last for much longer.

  • @09klx250t9f
    @09klx250t9f 7 лет назад +2

    Very well done Ben, I must admit I do miss those days.

  • @JustinMBailey
    @JustinMBailey 9 лет назад

    This was special, thank you very much for making it Ben. I honestly think one of the best parts of growing up when I did was getting to go to my local video story every weekend . Thank you again.

  • @alexanderdelarge9946
    @alexanderdelarge9946 8 лет назад +1

    Great nostalgia trip, thank you for taking me for the ride.

  • @Superbrant1
    @Superbrant1 Год назад

    This got me in the feels. Thank you for such a nice video.

  • @VHSlaughterFest
    @VHSlaughterFest 7 лет назад

    this is one of my favorite videos I've seen lately, thank you for making this

  • @The1985JAM
    @The1985JAM Год назад +1

    This had me in tears. Thanks for sharing and making this.

  • @TheMajorCinephile
    @TheMajorCinephile 4 года назад

    I'm so happy this little Doc is here for me to watch. It felt so cozy and nostalgic. I could almost SMELL this and other video rental stores from my childhood

  • @nakdad
    @nakdad 4 года назад +1

    Just beautifully done

  • @DeadRingerVideo
    @DeadRingerVideo Год назад +1

    This is being recommended to me 8 years later and I'm not even mad.

  • @730days
    @730days 9 лет назад +2

    Thank you for making this! Nothing made me happier back in the day than to walk through a mom & pop video store (anything but Blockbuster). This movie is beautiful and sad.

  • @KonjicJasmin
    @KonjicJasmin 10 лет назад

    Great documentary! Well done.

  • @charlestrippyfan92
    @charlestrippyfan92 5 лет назад +2

    I love this. ❤️ I grew up with video stores and it breaks my heart to see them go. ✌🏼

  • @limacom
    @limacom 7 лет назад

    This is a great doc film. Thanks.

  • @armesisp3201
    @armesisp3201 7 лет назад

    This is a nice documentary, thanks!

  • @cpnnpr
    @cpnnpr 7 лет назад

    A great peek into a bygone era. Charming to watch. Thanks!

  • @moz7777
    @moz7777 4 года назад +1

    I shed tears to this. Im 42 and its makes me sad the world isnt what it was back then.

  • @steadycamscottford
    @steadycamscottford 6 лет назад

    Thank you for making this. So bittersweet and moving. I hope Ed is doing well. I felt like I knew him and visited this place yet I never did. I grew up with video stores in Washington state and still go to one in Portland, Oregon. There's nothing like scanning titles and picking up physical box art and finding the most obscure and out of print movies Plus seeing friendly faces. It was very touching. Thank you!

  • @nobeac
    @nobeac 7 лет назад

    Good stuff. Brings back memories when I used to work at a video store myself.

  • @messmorise
    @messmorise 10 лет назад

    so beautiful and sad at the same time! Thanks for this :)

  • @regularguyreviews3048
    @regularguyreviews3048 8 месяцев назад

    What a beautiful doc , Ed seems like a genuinely good guy. This made me really sad. I’m glad you were there to capture this important moment for the future generations!

  • @Tdawg2828
    @Tdawg2828 10 лет назад +7

    Short but good. I feel really bad that he had to close his business after 23 years. Such a shame that something that was so important to our culture in the 80's and 90's could just disappear like that. I really miss going to rent videos!

  • @happytrailerreactor1723
    @happytrailerreactor1723 Год назад +1

    Hey just sub. I am in Norway, and i am a 80s kid. I am still upset how much i miss my secound family. Yes my local video store. Now its a restaurant. And my kids will never know how great community place it was for me. We had a great community, we could talke about Movies and meet people. I was there, on closing day. I did cry when the door did close for good.

  • @kasperstenbom
    @kasperstenbom 8 лет назад

    Great film, sad.. but great filmed & documented! Cheers!

  • @roseoris297
    @roseoris297 5 лет назад +4

    Rental video bring back so much memories..
    I remembered when i was in collage 2003. I had a dream. That One day i wanna have my own video store.
    It's a pity that kind of business not good anymore.
    Cuz so much joy. When you go to video store with your beloved friends, family, or best friend. Just to pick up one of the movies.
    Just remembered that day makes me smile and happy
    Damn i miss those days..

  • @bigmanbreakfast
    @bigmanbreakfast 7 лет назад

    Really great video. Lots of heart

  • @vanderg
    @vanderg 10 лет назад

    Great work! Reminds me of my own local video store that closed last year. I have very fond memories of riding my bike up to the store every summer as a kid and renting all sorts of movies and video games.

  • @blaggermouth
    @blaggermouth 8 лет назад +2

    the great days of renting a video or 2 on a friday or saturday night. or maybe both was an highlight way back when. thanks for upload.

  • @JCesartje
    @JCesartje 7 лет назад

    Very good! Loved it!

  • @feliciakidd9358
    @feliciakidd9358 2 года назад +1

    I loved video stores. Those were some great times renting out movies.

  • @kingraiderr
    @kingraiderr 6 лет назад

    Great documentary this should have millions of views.

  • @Trd2020
    @Trd2020 9 лет назад

    this brought sadness to me. took me back to my favorite job Hollywood video. thanks for making this video. great music choice

  • @ray27271
    @ray27271 7 лет назад +1

    great video ....brings back some great memories....heading down the local video store and spending ages looking at all the films....trying to decide which one to get....and more often than likely ending up getting both tapes...i guess the youth of today will never get to experience this...what a shame

  • @subhumantype
    @subhumantype 5 лет назад +2

    Outstanding video! I love physical media and I miss the rental stores. There’s nothing like walking around talking to people about movies and video games. I was born in 80 and rented movies from a lot of stores like Video World. I’m glad I got to have this awesome experience being an 80s kid 😎

  • @VHSMikey
    @VHSMikey 4 года назад +1

    Great filmmaking, excellent video.

  • @johnnycobb00
    @johnnycobb00 3 года назад

    heart breaking this, ill always miss the buzz from browsing the video store, it was one of the best feelings ever

  • @wftjet
    @wftjet 7 лет назад +2

    That's so great Joe Pantoliano showed up. Guido the Killer Pimp from Risky Business was an iconic supporting character of the early 1980s home video boom.

  • @CrayvanZutphen
    @CrayvanZutphen 7 лет назад

    I realy liked this. The emotions where captured so perfectly. This should be on a video streaming service as a tribute to the past.

  • @Grayskull77
    @Grayskull77 6 лет назад

    Great documentary! I sure miss video rental stores :-(
    Those were the good ol days

  • @drdmusicalmasterrecords6816
    @drdmusicalmasterrecords6816 5 лет назад

    I miss picking films and talking bout films this was really sad good vid man

  • @TheKillerWithinNJ
    @TheKillerWithinNJ 10 лет назад

    Great documentary! Well made!

  • @frankferrero5827
    @frankferrero5827 4 года назад +3

    44 and i shed a tear watching this.
    back in the 90's my parents had a restaurant and we closed it on tuesdays,i use to skip class and just go rent a bunch of movies and stay home,that is how much i love movies in general.
    what i remember the most is the trip to the video store,browsing,looking and choosing the movies was an event in itself.
    makes me sad that those days are gone,little things like returning a movie and talking to your friend who worked there was part of the appeal,oh well i guess that is just the way life is.

  • @tbowne05
    @tbowne05 4 года назад

    This was great. I have very fond memories of my local video store when I was a kid. And after that all the time I spent in blockbuster. It was magical.

  • @CheeseColeslaw
    @CheeseColeslaw 8 лет назад

    great documentary!

  • @deanscott8631
    @deanscott8631 6 дней назад

    Great work Ben! Hard not to miss places like this.

  • @willbroz
    @willbroz 10 лет назад

    Great video! Really took me back to when I was a kid and my dad use to take us to the video store! We use to pick a film together, buy some popcorn and watch it as a family! Our blockbuster has just shut down recently in our home town in England! Sad to see it go!

  • @seanvarian4578
    @seanvarian4578 5 месяцев назад

    This is beautiful and so sad at the same time...

  • @RockmnX37
    @RockmnX37 7 лет назад

    Great documentary!