I totally understand the desire, and I think it would absolutely benefit K to give us a head's up if they've licensed a title but it's in the pipeline.
However, I can understand why they wouldn't tell us about all the films there's not getting. Apple got >70 digital movies this week, and routinely gets at least 40-50 per week. K is going to get 8-10 (roughly 15-20% of weekly digital releases hit K). So, why "put it out there" about dozens of flicks you're not getting every week?
We know that 4K Catalog Updates are low on the priority list for K and there's roughly a 90 day window when something can still show up as "new" (meaning K didn't pass on it, they licensed it, it's just at the back of the queue). I think we'd all love a head's up here, and we have actually received that a couple of times. I'd love to see it more.
As it is, I use history as a guide, and Sony 4K Catalog Upgrades shipped in steelbooks have a terrible record on K.
Aliens Special Edition and The Abyss Special Edition were about 8 months late.
Those titles were passed on by K who thought the theatrical cuts would be fine. It was only after a bunch of requests and whatnot that they finally added them in the following year. Obviously most interested parties already bought the discs, others that bought the theatrical cuts were mad about paying full price for the Special Editions when those were the only ones they wanted, etc.
I fear that the Cameron 4K debacle became a self-fulfilling prophecy where K thought the alternate cuts wouldn't sell and then handled it in a way that ensured lower sales. And if that wasn't enough, they later updated only the theatrical cuts to Dolby Vision. Ugh. Anyway, this is generally my go-to example when people say "No one at K would actually make a decision like this."![]()
I was sorting through my Plex server to track these 4K HDR disc exclusives, which stands at 151 in my collection, and you're right there's a weirdly large number of Sony Steelbooks and Columbia Classics that aren't on K.