Where to find the DVD
Does anyone know where I can get a copy of the DVD. I checked Amazon and no cigar. Btw I live in America so it is probably not as easy for me to find a copy cuz my country is a bunch of religious nutcases.
Thanks
Does anyone know where I can get a copy of the DVD. I checked Amazon and no cigar. Btw I live in America so it is probably not as easy for me to find a copy cuz my country is a bunch of religious nutcases.
Thanks
Id recommend trying to get a copy of the DVD from amazon.co.uk or play.com etc then have it sent to you and use it on a multi regional DVD player.
shareI'm sorry I'm stupid but what is a multi regional DVD player mean
shareThose DVDs you have to pay for in pounds (or is it Euros, damn I can't remember if England switched or not). Is there a way I can order them in american dollars or another website I could try?
Sorry to be such a pain
dvds are in regions 1 is americas 2 europe (inc africa i think) 3 asia ( i think there is one more )
you cannot play region 1 on a region 2 dvd player unless you have a regionless dvd player
George Foreman has no finger prints.share
England did not change to Euros, we still have Pounds and Pence.
And no, all I can recommend is seeing if Amazon.com can import from .co.uk or something, or contacting Stewart Lee to see if he can help or something, I dunno.
Ok. Thanks a million.
And I apologize for being ignorant and not knowing if England switched or not.
The website also sells them, not sure if they do it in dollars though.
It's worth it, it's amazing!
FWIW:
I happened to see part of this on Bravo Canada, and started looking around for a DVD. I finally found a UK listing on ebay.com that claimed to be Region 0--that is, playable on any DVD player. After I ordered it, though, I noticed that elsewhere on the listing said it was Region 2 (Europe). I queried the vendor, who stalled until the eBay complaint period had expired and then dropped off eBay. I eventually received it, and sure enough, it was Region 2 only.
OK, so I went to my local "foreign electronics" store, and they were happy to convert it from Region 2 to North American Region 1. (It would be just a copy of the main program, though, without extra features, subtitles, and the like.)
On the day I was to pick the converted DVD up, I dropped by a local computer swap meet, and picked up an old Daytek DVD player for $15. Imagine my surprise when I discovered that it could play both formats.
So now I have, in my stack of video components, one DVD player that I use for playing only one DVD.
(I understand that the open source computer program VLC Player can also handle multiple formats.)