Please accept my apologies in advance if this is against any rules.

I have never watched an Akira Kurosawa film. How would I go about doing that?

I’m aware of the Criterion stuff, but it seems expensive if I don’t even know if I’m going to like it (I have weird neuroses around movies; consequently, I don’t watch many). Additionally I just don’t want any more plastic in my house, if you know what I mean.

Any advice would be very much appreciated – thanks!

Edit: thanks very much everyone for the constructive conversation. I’ll get an account at the library since I’d like to support them, and go from there. Cheers!

  • klu9@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    Others have already made good suggestions for older movies (libraries, Kanopy, Hoopla, Tubi, Archive.org etc). Also try buying second-hand physical media (DVDs, BDs).

    Specifically re an old Kurosawa movie, there are a couple of channels on Peertube with old movies they say are in the public domain (I am not a lawyer).

    A couple of such channels

    And ClassX has Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai


    There are also YouTube channels that claim to have public domain or licensed movies. I recently found an “all-in-one” site that collates movies from many such channels.

    If you don’t want to go via a third-party site like Cinetimes, you can try some supposedly-legally-free channels directly on YouTube:

    Warning: the movies on the channels are free, but not necessarily any good :) A lot of dross and only a few gems, unless you love trashy B-movies.

    A couple of possibly decent films (in my watchlist, haven’t seen them yet)

    All the ones I’ve given above are for video on demand (VOD), i.e. you pick what you want, press play and it starts.

    There are also linear channels, i.e. like old fashioned TV where things are shown according to a schedule and you see whatever’s on when you tune in. Nowadays sometimes called “live TV”, even when watching stuff made years ago. ( TheArchive.tv does both: VOD and one linear channel.)

    A lot of free linear channels (including some with old movies and TV shows) are available through different ways:

    • channels / apps on streaming devices like Roku, Firestick, Smart TVs etc
    • an app on your phone (currently, I use Televizo on Android)
    • an app on your computer (currently, I use Hypnotix on Linux)
    • websites

    For apps on your phone or computer, you might need to add a “playlist”: a big list of channels that you can pick from to watch. Currently, I use the English language playlist from iptv-org (over 2,000 channels from around the world).

    There is also the IOTV app for Roku, which I think uses the all languages playlist from iptv-org.

    Warning: using these playlists can mean a bunch of the included channels won’t work for you, e.g. because they are geoblocked to a specific country.

    Some example channels with older stuff:

    • lagoon8622@sh.itjust.worksOP
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      5 days ago

      Thank you very much for this detailed reply. I need to get PeerTube set up, in fact I’ve been needing to do it for a while. Thanks