On one hand, yay unlimited! But on the other hand, restrictions on times/movies/etc. So basically it’s still shitty. I wasn’t able to even see 3 movies a month when I wanted to because of all the restrictions. Haha
Sinemia giving me problems again. It's so annoying but it also saves so much money when it works. They're making people buy tickets directly from theaters websites now and mine doesn't charge my processing fees but sinemia is charging me them like they do and there is not an option to go around it right now. Not paying it when I don't even pay the fees at the theater
Anyone else getting ads for this on FB? I was alllllmooooost on board until I read "MoviePass co-founder" PRESHOW -- Attend first-run movies in theaters ... FREE
He actually seems somewhat competent. I just read this interview with him the other day. Ousted MoviePass cofounder Stacy Spikes breaks his silence on the startup's whirlwind rise and crash to financial reality
I’m convinced moviepass just falling apart so fast kinda made them go eh we don’t need it after all. it will forever make me sad.
you would think AMC’s success would make them think differently since that’s more of a one to one example
If that’s the case, Regal should just come out and say it to their customers instead of “No information at this time.”
Yeah, don’t have much hope (considering responses in that thread) — guess I’ll be getting the Alamo one.
I wonder if amc is regretting their program....or... if it's actually helping. Genuinely curious to the financial analytic side of that. I mean to me, it sounds like a home run. Which makes you wonder why regal isnt dojng it
It seems like AMC's A-List has been nothing but good for their business. AMC Stubs A-List Just Passed Another Big Milestone
It just makes so much more sense for theater chains to offer this service than third party. Moviepass offered tons of movies for next to nothing, they saw no concessions, had to pay back movie theaters for ticket sales, etc. Keep it all internal and it's bound to be a hit.
I imagine it's a game of averages. As an A-List subscriber, you spend $240 a year on movie tickets. Even if you go 3x a week and make full use of the service, the average person probably wouldn't have spent $240 a year on movie tickets before. Plus you have more people coming into the theater now, potentially buying concessions.
The a list is also millions of guaranteed dollars a year, it said what 100,000 people at $20 a month I'm spending less money overall but way more at AMC
Word on the street, and you didn’t here this from me, is that a certain chain will announce theirs via press conference on June 4th