I don't see any news of this being aired again or in the USA, & no news of it going on sale. It would be a shame if they sit on this to be aired only once a year in the UK, or never air it again. I see it got good reviews, so why would the BBC just sit on it? Still, it was nice of them to allow me to post a low-def version of it for 30 days, & not actually want it shut down for 7 weeks. But the owners of the song in the film, "I Want to Break Free" were total pigs about it.
If this song is a problem in the distribution of the film, I had successfully removed the song while still preserving the dialog. I could have easily dubbed in a Royalty-Free music track in it's place on the 720p-1080p version of the film if necessary. Maybe people should write the BBC that they would like to see the film in the USA, or love to buy a download of it.
Anywho, I see it is still available on the torrents if you missed it. Much less seeders than before, so it may take about an hour to download. I may try to re-seed it if there seems to be a demand for it.
Beware there is a version over a GB in size of the film in the torrents. The 473mb version looks exactly the same so don't waste your time with the oversized version. It's only a 1 hour movie. It only takes 600-700mb of file sizes in mp4 or MKV formats for every hour of video for a perfect copy of a 1080p blu-ray video. Excellent but not perfect blu-ray copies in mp4 or MKV formats can be had at 350-450mb per hour of video. People with bloated file sizes for these videos are using poor conversion techniques, crappy software, or simply don't know what they're doing.
And "cam" versions of films that look no better (or worse) than old VHS tape NEVER have to be more than 300mb per hour in file size. If the quality isn't in the original, recording or converting it to a larger file size & bitrate is just a waste of time & bandwidth. With ISP throttling, data caps, & slow speeds in rural or remote areas, it makes no sense to unnecessarily bloat file sizes. It's like all those stupid people who take 128kbs music, & re-code it to 320kbs thinking it will make it better. No, you still have a 128kbs quality song, except now it takes as much space, bandwidth, & resources as 320kbs audio.
In most cases with our background mixes, the songs that sound the worst were because the low-quality royalty-free original song sounded no better. They are highly compressed for use only as background music, but recording them at a higher bitrate would have only made no difference with the songs that had the poorest quality to start with. I see torrents of current TV shows. These network TV shows were broadcast with only 90-190kbs AAC audio at 30fps video. Why do the torrent seeders convert them to 1150kbs audio at 120fps when that quality wasn't there in the first place? It's not gonna make the video & audio any better.
I see the same 20 minute sitcoms at over a GB in file size in torrents, that are nothing more than exact copies of the original 125-250mb torrent down the list. If it was broadcast over the air or through the cable or recorded on your DVR in a file size no larger than 250mb, converting it to an over a GB file size isn't gonna make it better, but all the fools are downloading the identical copy in the larger file size thinking it is anyway.
Anywho the film's torrent is still out there. I will continue to seed for a while it if I see people downloading it. Please seed it for a while if you liked it too. If I'm the only one seeding it on my slow DSL, it will take 112 minutes to download. My uploading speed isn't that good. Spread the word around about it so others download & seed it too.
https://kickass.to/the-boy-in-the-dress-hdtv-x264-tastetv-ettv-t10007296.htmlI'm using uTorrent 3.1.3 Build 27498, from June 26, 2012 for my torrent downloads. It works excellent in XP, vista, W7, W8, & W8.1.
I know I say that it's best to get the software from the creator's website, but for the old version you want to go here,
http://www.oldapps.com/utorrent.php and here,
http://www.oldapps.com/utorrent.php?old_utorrent=7871You have to pay for ad-free new versions of utorrent. The free older versions are essentially the same ad-free versions. Refuse any updates for it, or shut off all updates for it. Your own anti-virus & firewall will be your protection, not your torrent client. Use peerblock whenever downloading or sharing torrents to block authorities, & governments from seeing what you download & share. Allow it to update (about once a week).
http://www.peerblock.com/Pay very close attention when you install any software. More often than not it will ask you to install a toolbar or browser helper you don't really need. Those apps pay to be there so you get the software free. But they are no good or can even be very bad. So decline installing anything but just the software you wanted. Be careful, the wording may make it seem like you are just approving of the software you wanted. Read it very carefully, it's worded to fool you into agreeing to install crap ware. If you use the regular & default install, it might install all the crap automatically too. Whenever it's an option, always choose custom install, & carefully read what you select. They're worded to even fool the best used car salesman to trick you into clicking & installing stuff you don't want.
It's free software. To get something or a lot for free it should be worth your time to be cautious, & read carefully so you know what you're clicking for. In most good free software, if you accidentally installed something else you didn't want, it's easily removed in your programs add/remove menu. Whenever I install any software from anywhere, I always check the menu anyway to be sure they didn't slip something by me. Familiarize yourself with it so you don't remove something crucial that's actually supposed to be there. When in doubt, google it to find out what it is in there.
I consider torrents & most good torrent software to be much safer than surfing the web. But torrents should not be confused with other p2p fileshare systems out there like frostwire, emule, & edonkey. There are no peer comments, ratings, & control on those types of systems, so are much more risky.