"It's not you. It's me... and Eric Falkmy plummeting stock valuation."
In a surprise to absolutely no one, MoviePass has yet another change in store for many of its users. As of today, annual subscribers are getting booted from their unlimited plans and downgraded to three movies per month.
SEE ALSO: MoviePass is dying and the memes are brutalThe new annual plan was announced via email. A number of users posted screenshots of it to Twitter.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Citing a specific section of the Terms of Use (rarely a good start), MoviePass informed its annual loyalists that they would immediately be removed from their unlimited plan and put under a three-movies-a-month limit, with $5 off additional movie ticket purchases.
For those displeased with the change, MoviePass presented a refund for any months remaining on users' current contracts. However, unhappy customers only have a week to decide on that cancellation. The offer expires August 31.
And, if that weren't enough, some users who were understandably done with MoviePass and ready to cancel this afternoon... actually couldn't. Irritated subscribers took to Twitter to document the app's apparent rejection of user credentials.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Many reached out to MoviePass's customer support Twitter for help with the error. (Notably, @MoviePass_CS has not posted since July 4. You know, right around when rampant surge pricing became a thing.) That being said, some had success ending their MoviePass relationship.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
MoviePass's official statement does not address the spotty trouble with cancellations, but cheerfully frames the change as aiding in making a larger movie selection possible:
This new offering is part of the transition to our new subscription model. We’re excited to offer subscribers the option of going to three movies a month for $9.95 and providing up to a $5.00 discount for additional movie tickets. We are grateful to our MoviePass community and have offered a number of our annual subscribers the option for a refund if the new plan doesn’t align with their viewing preferences. With this transition, we intend to offer more film options so subscribers can continue exploring a wide variety of movies. We believe that our new plan is a positive change in the right direction and that it captures the needs and desires of most of our MoviePass community in our journey for an accessible and quality movie experience.
Reports of sudden, drastic changes and trapped subscribers may seem like just another chapter in the MoviePass saga. But, for those annual subscribers who went all-in on the MoviePass craze, it is the end of an unconditional love.
RIP, commitment. Hello, three one-night flings a month. (Or, you know, you could begin anew with that AMC alternative. Whatever butters your popcorn.)
Previous:Episode 4: The Wave of the Future
Next:Robin Triumphant
Hillary Clinton's devastating loss spells heartbreak for women everywhereNetflix's 'Black Summer' is a middling zombie thriller'Game of Thrones': Nobody should end up on the Iron ThroneTrump supporters celebrate their victory on TwitterCanadian immigration site crashes mid'Avengers: Endgame' directors 'shocked' at reaction to 'Infinity War'J.K. Rowling keeps her cool during election, calmly destroys Twitter trollsJ.K. Rowling keeps her cool during election, calmly destroys Twitter trollsFacebook Messenger might soon be reThe moment Trump fans learned the Donald had won'The Rise of Skywalker' trailer analysis: Everything old is new againNo America, this is not an episode of 'Black Mirror'Americans in London can eat their feelings with free cheeseburgers todayThere are officially too many video streaming servicesPeople are blacking out their Twitter profiles to protest a Trump presidency'Avengers: Endgame' directors predict the ending of 'Game of Thrones'This woman lived in her car to volunteer at 200 food banks and prove a point about hungerYour 'smart AI' often involves a lowThe moms of America are sending really sweet texts right nowJ.K. Rowling keeps her cool during election, calmly destroys Twitter trolls If Heavy, Then Lift by Alia Akkam These Quizzes Are Hard, and Other News by Sadie Stein What We’re Loving: Works That Work by The Paris Review Good Little Girls, and Other News by Sadie Stein Let the Memory Live Again by Sadie Stein Laughing in the Face of Death: A Kurt Vonnegut Roundtable The Funnies, Part 3 by Tom Gauld What We’re Loving: Smells, Films, and Flames by The Paris Review Counter Culture by Amie Barrodale and Clancy Martin Master Class by Katherine Hill Notes from a Bookshop: April, or Spring Fever by Kelly McMasters Buy Tiffany’s, and Other News by Sadie Stein Close Reading, and Other News by Sadie Stein On the Occasion of the Removal of My Girlfriend’s Dog’s Balls by Simon Akam Faulkner Nobel on the Block, and Other News by Sadie Stein Red and Blue by Anna Wiener Letter from Jaipur by J. D. Daniels A Dinner in Moscow by Jonathan Wilson No Amusement May Be Made by Evan James Lello Bookstore, Porto, Portugal by Sadie Stein
2.0434s , 8223.71875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Eric Falk】,Inspiration Information Network