As high def fans may have noticed, has pretty much by indefinitely postponing all their previously scheduled Blu-Ray releases and offering up only the occasional one or two day and date discs, such as last week's 'Night At The Museum.' The studio has repeatedly cited for these postponements but to be honest, for a minute. Of course, the studio will never publicly admit to pulling high definition support - after all it is a publicly traded company - and thus production delays are the typical damage-control excuse that have been used by studios for decades. My take on this situation is that here, that could have two reasons. The first might be that and wants to see a winner before pouring more money into high definition releases. If that is the case, we won't see Fox releases in a long time because the war will not go away any time soon. The other, more likely, reason - and the one I think drove this decision - is that the and that the studio is waiting until a bigger market penetration has been reached. In other words, Why release top titles to a meager audience when a little patience could double, triple or quadruple their rewards. For Blu-Ray fans it is too bad, of course, that Fox is holding out on them just the way they did when DVD first arrived. These formats die without proper software support and in that case Fox will not make any money off their high def releases at all. While people easily believe the 'publicity friendly' explanations studios serve up whenever they change plans, At least trickle releases would be possible in that case. Therefore the real answer is much simpler, harsh as it may seem. The studios doesn't' want to release these films any longer at this time.