Happy Bats and Videomatica were two of my favourite Video stores in town.
http://www.westender.com/articles/entry/news-final-scene-for-indie-video-stores/news-and-views/
http://www.straight.com/article-391...close-doors-summer-after-almost-three-decades
http://www.westender.com/articles/entry/news-final-scene-for-indie-video-stores/news-and-views/
The following excerpt was then posted on the Happy Bats web site on March 25th:NEWS: Closing scene for indie movie stores?
Posted By: Jessica Barrett
03/23/2011 12:00 AM
Q: What happened to Alpha Video?
A: The Internet.
Commercial Drive residents who expressed dismay on Facebook about the recent demise of a popular independent video store may soon have company in other areas of the city.
The past few years have not been kind to indie video outlets which have seen business decline steadily in the wake of prolific downloading options from iTunes to bit torrents and Netflix. Now many are struggling to stay in business.
At Main Street’s Happy Bats Cinema, a note advising clientele not to panic accompanies large For Lease signs in the front windows. Two-and-a-half years after the store upscaled considerably from a closet-sized space on a side street to a prominent storefront on Main and 12th, the business is downsizing.
“Six months after we moved into this space we noticed a definite deterioration in the business,” says manager Robert Jamieson. “We noticed there were less people coming in, more people talking freely about how much they download things and now with so much pay-per-view television and the Internet, we’ve just lost a lot of our business over time.”
Happy Bats is looking to get out of its five-year lease at its current location and find a cheaper, smaller venue in the neighbourhood, a tall order on hip Main Street.
“We think we can be a viable store for years to come, but we need to reduce our overhead quite a bit to keep up with the people that are still loyal to come to a place like this,” says Jamieson.
Over on the West Side, Limelight Video manager James McBurney says video stores in the neighbourhood are experiencing similar pressures. While many indie outlets have closed in recent years, McBurney says Limelight has stayed afloat by catering to an older customer base (the store still carries VHS tapes) and offering a home video transfer service. But even those tactics haven’t insulated the business against its web-based competition. McBurney estimates business has declined by more than 20 per cent in the past three years. “We don’t really know what we’re going to do. We’ve been in this spot for maybe 10 years... and now we have to try and make everything a little more compact,” he says. But he added the store likely won’t consider moving. “It’s not desirable, because we’ve been here for so long. I think we’re prepared to see it to the end.”
Meanwhile, independent video stores on Commercial Drive seem to have benefited slightly from the closure of Alpha Video. Joe Burgess, manager of rival outlet Black Dog Video says he’s seen a “bit of a boost” in customers since Alpha closed shop earlier this month. He’s not worried about the long-term health of the business. “We’re not quite as busy, but we’re always signing up new people,” he says, adding that he believes knowledgeable staff, a wide selection and a personal touch will keep customers coming to their local video stores for the foreseeable future.
Happy Bats customer Maddy Kipling agrees. “You can’t ask a computer for an opinion. I think online stuff tends to be mainstream, so if you want anything outside of that I don’t think you’re going to necessarily find that on the Internet,” she said as she was signing up for a new account.
That attitude is keeping Happy Bats manager Jamieson upbeat about the fate of his business. But he says more people will have to make a point of supporting the store if it is to have a viable long-term future. “People talk about buying food that comes locally and shopping locally, but renting locally seems to be out of that equation,” he says.
And now, it looks like Videomatica will be closing this summer as well:Friday, March 25, 2011
The End.
Hey, anyone seen the Westender this week? Who is that schnook? Well, that interview and gorgeous photo took place last Wednesday, five days before the locks were changed on our doors. If there were ever a more fitting example of how fast things can change...
So, we really are closed. And that's it. There is a long and winding story about how we arrived at this point, but the shortest version is we thought be were positively working with our current landlord to leave our lease and find a smaller more affordable location, only to have the carpet pulled out from under us. We really did believe the agreement to let us out of the lease once a new tenant was found was made in good faith. What the landlord did was totally in their right, as it is all business for them (though having the right to do so and being the right thing to do may vary). We told you not to panic, because while we really needed to move, we thought we had made an agreement to make that happen. As Don Vito Corleone said to his youngest in The Godfather, "There wasn't enough time, Michael. There just wasn't enough time."
http://www.straight.com/article-391...close-doors-summer-after-almost-three-decades
Videomatica to close doors this summer after almost three decades
Industry innovations cause the legendary video store to roll end credits
By Martin Dunphy, May 5, 2011
After 28 years of serving Vancouver’s most discerning film buffs, Videomatica will close its doors this summer.
In a May 5 news release, co-owner Graham X Peat blamed the tremendous surge in home-video options of the past few years for the decision to finally roll the end credits on the well-known Kitsilano independent video store, and he expressed satisfaction with the almost three decades of service rendered to a faithful customer base.
“Our goal was to build the very best collection of movies available in any one place, and I think we may have achieved that,” he wrote.
“Although Videomatica was known for its many celebrity customers—among them Johnny Depp, David Bowie, Julie Christie, Colin Firth, and Jody Foster—the greatest joy was seeing our devoted movie fans comng in time after time to seek out their favourite films, directors, and actors.”
Peat told the Georgia Straight by phone that it wasn’t just TV’s video on demand and Netflix that made him and original cofounder Brian Bosworth decide to shutter the operation that was famous with film aficionados for its hard-to-find titles and sheer volume of stock.
“There are a lot of straws on that camel’s back,” he said. “There are a tremendous number of [consumer] choices out there…many distractions, most of them free.”
Peat added that their decision was cemented by a gradual economic erosion, “a steady slide, definitely in the past two years. No ups and downs, just downs.”
Although Videomatica's customers were loyal, he said, they couldn't ignore the cheaper, more convenient, or free alternatives available. "Most people will say [of the store], 'Yeah, great place, but I don't go there anymore.'"
A definite closing date probably won’t be announced for weeks at least, he said.
“We predict it might be before the end of the summer. We want to have control of it, and we don’t want to be one of those stores that just [disappear]. We’d like to see all our customers again and have a nice send-off.”
After opening on the 1800-block of West Fourth Avenue in May 1983, the store expanded and moved three doors down in 1987.
“We started with a very small inventory, 350 films,” Peat said, adding that many were classic movies, foreign releases, and music films. He said that the store’s DVD inventory alone now stands at 30,000 titles. “We still have many unique titles that you can’t get.”
He said the documentary collection—”probably my favourite collection in the store”—is about 2,500 titles.
Without releasing details, Peat said attempts are being made (“We’ve been in meetings for quite some time”) to ensure the collection will remain available to the public in some form in the future.
If that is not possible, he said, he and Bosworth will hold a public sale of individual titles.
So if you can’t live without that copy of Death in Venice, start saving your Pennies From Heaven.
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