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Rating DVDs with Python
februar 08th, 2020
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Rating DVDs with python


Recently, my kids were talking about buying some DVDs of their

favourite movies. My son was still missing part IV to VI of Star Wars,

and considered a boxed edition with all movies. Buying new stuff is

evil, so I pointed my browser to our local craigslist (finn.no in

Norway). A while later, I'd found what I consider the perfect deal: A

huge box with almost 200 DVDs, including ALL movies that my kids

wanted to buy. And all that for almost nothing (we speak the price of

two(!) Star Wars boxed editions for all 198 DVDs). Most of the movies

in the collection are Limited Editions or Directors Cuts or whatever

you call all these fancy boxes. Hard to say no to this!


So, how do you handle so many movies? Where to start?


I jotted down a list of all movie titles in emacs. To prioritize and

skip the worst movies (time is precious), I like to refer to IMDB

ratings. Everything below 6.5 is a no-go. But how was I going to

retrieve all those ratings? Searching for all movies on imdb.com would

take hours.


Python to the rescue. There is a neat module called imdbpy that is

able to retrieve information about movies from IMDB. There is lots of

information available, but I was only interested in the rating. But, I

found out, that the canonical title was nice to have. After all, my

list was just the result of me punching in all titles as best as I

could. To make things a little bit worse, some of the DVDs had German

titles, some Norwegian titles. IMDB tends to do an OK job with

converting these titles to the original, but not always.


So here is a small snippet of my list:


------

Charlie's Angels

Cliffhanger

Cloverfield

Conair

Corps Bride

D-War

Da Vinci-Koden

Danes With Wolves

Das Boot

------

=> gopher://:/

The script itself consist of only some lines of python. Most of it is

error-handling, in case IMDB was not able to retrieve the movie or

missing information. Here is the code. It's not pretty. You have been

warned!


------
from sys import stdin
from imdb import IMDb

def main():
    lines = stdin.readlines()
    for i in range(len(lines)):
        lines[i] = lines[i].replace('\n','')
    ia = IMDb()
    for movie_name in lines:
        movies = ia.search_movie(movie_name)
        # No hit? Use the original name and continue
        if len(movies) == 0:
            print("|", movie_name, "| ? |")
            continue
        # Usually, the first match is what we're looking for:
        movie = movies[0]
        if movie:
            ia.update(movie, ['vote details'])
            dem = movie.get('demographics')
            if dem:
                print("|", movie['canonical title'], "|",
                movie.get('demographics')['imdb users']['rating'], "|")
            else:
                # No rating - seems like some movies have bad data
                print("|", movie_name, "| ? |")
        else:
            print("|", movie_name, "| ? |")

if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()
------

Now, to convert my list into an org-mode-table, I just did the

following:


cat ~/Sync/org-files/movies.org | python3 movie-org.py > rated-movies.org


Now it was just the matter of opening the resulting file in emacs and

pressing TAB to align all colums nicely. Resulting in:


------
| Superman Returns                                       | 6.0 |
| As It Is in Heaven                                     | 7.5 |
| Terminator 2: Judgment Day                             | 8.5 |
| Lincoln Rhyme: Hunt for the Bone Collector             | 6.6 |
| Borgias, The                                           | 7.9 |
| Cell, The                                              | 6.3 |
| Dark Knight, The                                       | 9.0 |
| Day After Tomorrow, The                                | 6.4 |
------

So here we go! A list of movies with ratings.


That said, I'm not very fond of watching movies. I guess that's

because I'm sitting in front of a screen all day at work. Also,

watching movies is way to passive for me. Playing with my computer is

not. Before I met my wife, I had hardly watched any movies at home,

except some rentals that I watched together with friends. In fact, I

watched my first DVD together with my wife in my late 20s.


Anyway, this script was a nice little project!


Oh, one more thing: I wrote a little script that exposes parts of the

Internet Movie Database on Gopher. I call it the Gopher Movie Database.


Here you go:



GMDb (gopher)

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