> These are edits of popular movies that take place over the span of about 10 minutes but instead of being uploaded for review or critique, they instead aim to make viewing the original movies unnecessary.<p>If a 10 minutes summary is enough so it is not worth to see your movie, maybe the problem of your movie is not the 10 minute summary.<p>Maybe we should be able to sue movie makers if the movie quality is not up to pair with the trailer. False advertisement is not legal, even in Japan. That way people would not need to look to 10 minutes summaries to know if watching a movie is going to be a waste of money and time.
> they instead aim to make viewing the original movies unnecessary<p>Except watching the movie was never <i>necessary</i> in the first place.<p>> The videos also featured added narration, which has now resulted in more arrests this week in Japan.<p>So adding their own unique content made this copyright infringement somehow worse? Is it illegal in Japan to narrate a film?
As a gamedev I rarely play games myself now but just glance through playthrough videos to learn, buying is more like supporting dev and showing respect. Why is this acceptable in game industry but 0 tolerance in film? Even music has free streaming that can let you try before buy.
They will run out of space in jail with all the reaction videos which are the same thing. Condensed movies/shows in under 10 minutes. Sometimes even 2 or 3 videos per movie.<p>And usually full reactions are published on platforms like Patreon.