International record industry organization IFPI, which represents the recording industry, said Dutch police were dismantling the disc factory in Velddriel, Netherlands, southeast of Amsterdam, after raiding it Tuesday.
The IFPI said the DVD press, which was making pirated copies of movies such as Die Hard 4.0, Ocean's Thirteen and Evan Almighty, might have come from a legitimate plant that had been declared bankrupt.
Officers also found discs that formed part of an order for thousands of pirate CDs featuring a compilation of chart music.
"This raid shows that in 2007, physical piracy continues to damage the entertainment industries," IFPI Chairman and Chief Executive John Kennedy said.
"Here, we have a clandestine factory operating in a major Western economy (that is) producing huge volumes of product," he said.
Piracy remains rife around the world. China has the highest piracy rates, ahead of Mexico, Spain and Brazil, according to recent figures from the IFPI.
Based on figures earlier this year from research group Screen Digest, the Netherlands was estimated to have lost $129 million from piracy in 2005, well below the $1.5 billion and $1 billion potential losses for France and the United Kingdom, respectively.
Dutch antipiracy group Brein said discs from the Velddriel plant were being sold in schools, offices, bars and on the street. It estimates that that such piracy accounts for about 10 percent of the Netherlands' physical-piracy problem.






