Region 4.
Along with Mexico, South America, Central America, Caribbean, Australia, Papua New Guinea and much of Oceania.
No. They have different TV formats. The US use NTSC and our TV's are PAL. The only way to get around this is to either copy the DVD to your computer and re-burn it in NTSC format; or make sure that the DVD player is Multi-region.
Only in the UK. You can find various sellers on Ebay and Amazon selling the DVD version, but keep in mind that you will need a multi-region DVD player as the disc is a Region 2 DVD. This is the only official release of the movie as of today. Hopefully one day, we Americans are able to enjoy this classic on something other than VHS.
The TLD .nz is used by websites based in New Zealand.
06/05-2009 https://www.imusic.dk/item/8717418205157/tv-series-2009-samantha-who-season-1-dvd http://www.fandangomusicshop.net/catalog/product_info.php?pag=13&ln=eng&products_id=F21158
No, a dvd device is either a DVD player, or a DVD drive on a computer.
East coast of NZ is the region of Gisborne
America belongs to DVD Region 1
A one code DVD is region locked and cannot be played outside of whatever region it has been locked in. A multi region DVD is not region locked and can be used anywhere.
December 1st 2010
Tasmania is in Australia, thus has the DVD Region 4.
Region free dvd player is legal.
DVD region 3 is Southeast and East Asia. DVD region 3 software will only work in equipment build for that area.
DVD region code is a to protect the DVD producer, so there are 6 regions in the world, and when you play DVDs, your player's region should be the same with your DVDs. But some palyer software can be region free DVD player software(Easy DVD Player)
2, which is the main DVD region of Europe and the Middle East.
Ireland is in Western Europe, and thus falls into DVD region 2.
A region free dvd player.
That the DVD isn't linked to a region code, an should play in any DVD player no matter what region code the player is meant for.