Pioneer To Finally Stop Making LaserDisc Players For Good

Decades after VHS, years after the rise of DVD in the late 1990s, and not too long after Blu-Ray was declared the victor in the most recent format war, Pioneer has announced that they will no longer make LaserDisc players (although they will still produce another 3,000 before shutting production down for good). If you’re like me, your first reaction to this was probably, “They still make LaserDisc players?”

Indeed, Pioneer sold more than 9.5 million LaserDisc players since it started producing them in the 1980s, accounting for more than half of the 16.8 million players sold by all companies since that time. Although studios stopped putting out LaserDisc titles in 2000, the format has continued to endure as a niche product through the used market, and through other uses such as karaoke.

LaserDisc enthusiasts will know that these were essentially the first mass market video products to support special features (e.g. commentaries, documentaries) for home movies, bonuses which would become popularized with the advent of DVD. Despite this, the discs were expensive, physically cumbersome to handle, and often required you to flip the disc to complete a movie. Nonetheless, I know for many, the LaserDisc format will always have a special place in people’s hearts, as the format through which they owned their first massively expensive Criterion Collection film, or listened to their first director’s commentary.

Have any readers actually owned a LaserDisc in the past? If so, leave memories in the comments.

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  • nux
    i would like to know where i can buy one...my original one's gone...i'd like to still watch my collection of box sets from time to time...thanks..

    -nux (manila. philippines)
  • bryan
    I still have and use my pioneer laser disk player. with about three hundred titles , I would like to transfer to a hard drive and possibly burn some to dvd. If anyone knows a fast way to do this, I'll watch this site for a reply. thanks
  • ali
    i have 2 pioneer ld player. last model. can play dvd. i have many good ld. 10 tarzan movie (Johnny Weissmuller.). star wars(original) el cid, dune, many more. my grandson (age 8) like it.still collect western movie. play ld every week.
  • BayouBengal
    I bought my Pioneer Laserdisc player in 1993 from Walmart as they discontinued selling individual electronic components. It was $300 then $225 and finally down to $150 in just a couple of weeks so I bought it. One of the reasons I bought it was because it also played CD's and my wife had gotten the CD player in the divorce. The other reason I bought it was that the local Alladin Video store always had the new releases in laserdisc when the VHS copies were out. Then Blockbuster bought them out and they stopped getting new releases in LD. Then a couple of months later they started selling off the LD's because "nobody's renting them" and I told them "you haven't put a new release in the LD's in months of course nobady's renting them!" But I did get some great deals on some good movies. My last LD purchase from them was "Valley of the Dolls" for $3.
  • Cary G
    I still have my player, as it was also my original DVD player. I had around 20 LDs at the time DVDs starting getting popular, so I upgraded my old player to the Pioneer DVL-919 so I could play both. Before then I had only access to playing DVDs via a DVD-ROM drive I bought on auction for my PC.

    It lasted me for years until it started having problems reading some DVDs and I chose not to fix it. Both it and my crate of Laserdisc titles are in storage in my basement right now, probably because I just was too lazy to sell them off when they were actually worth something, like I did with my original LD player.
  • Robo
    Oh yes... many a wonderful laserdisc memory. I even worked in a laserdisc store for many years. I owned hundreds of titles (even some Discovision titles), sold a bunch of them in the late 90's when they were still worth something, and made a killing off ebay from a lot of rare, out-of-print titles. I kept about 500 for a long time and finally wittled my collection down to about 30 titles which I still own. I still have two working Pioneer players that I fire up maybe twice a year just to relive the glory that was The Criterion Collection's release of MIDNIGHT COWBOY or BLOW-UP. The early to mid 1990s where the golden age for laserdiscs and it truly was a great time for movie lovers.

    Also, don't forget that laserdisc was around as a consumer format since 1978. That was the year Universal launched their Discovision line of titles. It took quite a while for the format to gain any kind of consumer traction, but it actually had a good, long 20-year run as a format.
  • Lets Hope DVD Players stick around for alot longer.
  • that's sad. i still have my laser disc player and i still have over 60 laserdiscs that still work, including my much loved supermodels in the rainforest laserdisc ha ha. though i can't say i knew they were still making them. i can't believe i jumped on that boat. it was cool at the time... but in retrospect a real waste of space.
  • Seth
    Ya know, I do vaguely remember the SelectaVision videodisc. I forgot all about it. I just kind of thought I was thinking about the laserdisc. Video on a vinyl disc... amazing!
  • Nahhh didnt have one
    I went from VHS to DVD to Blu-ray

    But if it helped orignated dvds and special features im all for congratualting it!
  • I can hear Kevin Smith on the Chasing Amy commentary: "Fuck DVD!"
  • That is true.
  • I thought about buying one because I thought one day they would beat VHS in sales but they were too expensive. I'm glad I held out for the DVD and didn't waist my money one something so ridiculous.

    the definition of money wasted is Laser Disc.
  • Jimmy Mac
    I'd love a SelectaVision CED. They just seem so... bizarre.
  • Good, the only people that buy these are 90+ anyway, get Grandma a BluRay!
  • Mike D
    You must be like 16 or something. If you were into the whole home theatre thing before it got trendy and made really mediocre by the masses, then you would know that this was something really good back in the late 80s and 90s. People 20 years from now will read this post and think your comment sound lame because Blu-Ray will be obsolete.
  • ha ha if people 20 years from now are reading this post then I must really be the shit.

    And btw, in 20 years I will be saying "So Long" to BluRay as well.
  • Morgan
    My Dad still has his laser disk player. He was one of those that bought 3 beta players because he thought they would win out over VHS. But my favorite memories of out laser disk player are 1) watching the original Stargate movie for the first time- it was our first laser disk movie that was absilutely made of awesome! and 2) the Clue choose your own adventure game! That we still have the laser disk player and the game just because I liked to play it so much-and I"m 25!
  • Bye Laserdisc
    Sold my Pioneer player and about 50 laserdics (Star Wars box set!) last year on Craiglist for good $$$ :) My dad still has one of those old RCA CED (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitance_Electron...players; noone wants that anymore.
  • Ken
    I have three players still. I have the exact Pioneer pictured in the article. I pick discs up used for about $1 and I have probably 2k discs. Many of them either have never come out on DVD (and probably never will) or are unedited (Revenge of the Nerds is complete!), or have extras (great commentaries on John Waters flicks) we'll never see again.

    Also, if I am ever going to a convention and am able to get something signed I always bring a laser disc along with me.
  • lono
    Anyone want to buy my Aliens Special Edition 6-laserdisc box set?
  • ...What's a laser disc player?
  • iceman38888
    I still have my pioneer LD.. I dont know if anyone's mentioned it yet.. But its the best way to watch the ORIGINAL star wars trilogy sans the 1997 edits, and it still holds true today with that shitty transfer on the DVD releases of the original.
  • Ant
    Check this out, Pioneers original demo/promo for Laserdisc
    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-20533281...

    Memories :-)
  • We were a VHS family, but I still remember my first (and really only) experience with LaserDisc at a friend's house, fastforwarding through Species to see some boobs. Thank you LaserDisc, for opening my pubescent mind to all sorts of new possibilities--and Natasha Henstridge's glorious rack.
  • smallerdemon
    I have an old Sony LaserDisc-CD player that sits unattached in the AV cabinet. I only have a handful of titles, but the ones I do have I am happy to have (the blood red edition LD of Evil Dead II for example, and the original Flash Gordon LD release). It still works great and does the disc flip for you. I'm sure I'll hold on to it until it dies. I still would like to get a hold of those original Star Wars LD releases at some point.
  • Good bye LD...I still remember watching '12 Monkeys' on LD back as a kid...and karaoke of course...RIP
  • thxdave
    VHS generally won because it was the first format to get to the two-hour tape length so you could get an entire (long) movie onto a single tape.....and the porn industry! ;-) The large cover art issue was the same thing we have suffered through with the transition from LP's to CD's. When I go back and look at the wonderful packaging that we had with the Criterion releases, I realize how much we have lost. Add to that the fact that you can't bypass the damned opening screens, promo ads, etc. and the lack of a really smooth, fluid scan mode and we've given up a lot. The side flip issue WAS a major stumbling block until the side-flipping players came along, but it was still an annoying interruption to the flow of a movie. Also, laser rot was a sporadic problem that many of us put up with. I don't know how many discs in my collection have fallen prey to this. I'm hoping that the BluRay will finally be able to reach its' potential (after all the firmware updates, that is).
  • Dhyra
    Back in the time, it's a big improvement from VHS to LD (I would say bigger than DVD to Blu-ray). Don't know the U.S has VCD but it was popular in Asia once (the 90s). VCD is a huge disadvantage from LD and even VHS. Just horrible. The thing I like about LD is that it has a big cover-art (like the LPs - I prefer LP than CD because of its cover-art and quality) and some of the introduction of the movie which I find it better than DVD cover introduction. Well, now we have Blu-ray, the best video format so far and think about how technology going so crazy.

    P.S: I'm not old enough to know that VHS won the format war once because the porn industry has chosen it (ppl. said so :) ). Is it really true ? :-)
  • VCD is still popular in many Asian countries. It's probably due to the pirating, but I still find VCD items (movies and karaoke) when I go to the Philippines. But I do agree that VCD is poorer in quality than VHS.

    I actually don't think Blu-ray will catch on until its pricing becomes much more competitive than DVDs and until HDTVs become much more dominant. DVD is relatively cheap and the players can be found everywhere (I see people in the subway carry around those bulky "portable" players!).

    If I were a betting man, my money would be on DVDs still an then digital distribution.
  • Conor
    While travelling in SE Asia over the last 3 months I've seen more LazerDisc players than DVD. Probably due to the karaoke craze that's still going strong, but there were also pirated movies (up to date ones too) available to buy on the format as well. And if the fact that there will be no more players of lazerdiscs then hopefully it'll bring an end to the some of the godawful singing in the bars!
  • Dan
    I was a young'n, being born in '86, but we had Beta...which the machine then ate our Bevery Hills Cop. So we went VHS which lasted us a long time until we made the jump to DVD. Never even seen a LaserDisc
  • Don't go knocking laserdiscs. If it weren't for them, we wouldn't have DVDs as they originated many of the features. And Criterion got their start in laserdiscs. Some of their laserdiscs (such as THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS with a recreation of the lost ending) have yet to be replicated on DVD.

    I was into laserdiscs in the 90's. In fact, when DVD was released, I hated the format. I knew what it meant for laserdiscs (which were just starting to catch on). I finally gave in.

    I still have a few hundred LDs left, although I haven't played any in a while.

    It was a great format. Sorry to see it go.
  • thxdave
    Actually, the LD was introduced in 1978 in Atlanta only 2 years after VHS came onto the market. It was an incredible upgrade from VHS and even better than the superior Beta format of videotape. Criterion got a TON of my money back then with their amazing LD releases. Most of the "extras" we take for granted today were the result of the LD format. I still have one player and hundreds of LD's and the audio quality on this format still surpasses DVD's overly compressed signal. We will probably get those dynamics back with BluRay along with a lot more resolution.

    RIP Laserdisc, some of us still love 'ya.
  • i love my LD player
  • Mike D
    Guess you had the really cheap model... I had the Pioneer player that flipped sides for you. So I didnt have to worry about that, just waited 15 seconds for the 2nd side to load up.
  • Dhyra
    I don't think LD player originally has flipping side feature but it's a pain to flip side (or even wait 15 seconds) when the movie going to an exciting scene.
  • My parents own one, along with VHS and Beta. I always enjoyed watching movies on it. They were crystal clear, and I personally didn't mind the flip because it gave me time to use the bathroom or get more treats. I am surprised they are still making them!
  • I remember seeing Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade for sale on Laserdisk at my local rental store years ago. There was a picture on the back of Indy with a tarantula climbing on him. That scene was not on the VHS or DVD version, so I've always wondered about that.
  • Ant
    yeah, my initial thought was do they still make them. I'm in Uk and it was no where near as popular here as it was it the states. But i loved it, and all my friends did too as they had never seen anything like it and my house became a regular place for movie nights with my pro logic setup then eventually AC3. I sold my player years ago but got a bit nostalgic when seeing a few for sale on Ebay so decided to buy one(same one in pic) and a few discs to go with it. I loved the discs collectability. some of the box sets were amazing. And again friends were blown away by them. I like to remind them these days that special features were not introduced on DVD. it came from Laser Disc. Terminator 2 being one great example. Only difference being no menus. RIP Laser Disc
  • from my own experiences growing up in the 80s anyway... I never knew anyone who owned one of those laser disc players.
  • I watched quite a few movies on laser disc in college. The picture quality was sweet, but the disk was the size of an LP and it only held about an hour of video per side. So about halfway though any movie you had to pause and flip the disk over to watch the rest. It was actually kind of annoying. Although blu-ray discs don't have to be flipped, I agree they'll stay niche and never really be popular with the mass market.
  • I think its selling Bluray a bit short to curse it with laser disc's fate, but I agree it will remain more niche than the DVD format.
  • Buba
    I never really enjoyed LD, it was to much of a hassle and the whole fact of flipping it in the middle of a movie always bugged me. I'm suprised as shit that they still were making these
  • goodnight sweet prince
  • man, re-reading this post has now made me feel nostalgic for 80s technology... now i feel like going on Ebay to buy an Atari 2600 console...
  • They were never that popular in the 1980s.

    I really believe that Blu-Ray will suffer the same fate and dry up soon.
  • I agree, Blu-ray is niche and most definitely is not a threat to DVD in any way. DVD will still be around for quite a while.
  • I still have about 200 laser discs in my closet. I must say but I always thought that Laser Disc produced a sharper sound quality that DVD! Still the disc was too big to become a mainstream favorite.

    Chuck
  • I just bought a great movie on Laserdisk. It is "Batman & Robin."
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