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"...I'd aggressively undercut the price"

Aren't they? For $10/mo, I can go see one movie a day, no additional cost to me. And it's not the theater chains that need convincing- it's the studios. The theaters just aren't permitted to take any sizable percentage of the ticket price.

If anything, "butts in seats" shows demand. If demand drives prices, then the studios think the prices can go up because demand is up. If MoviePass's plan is to profit from data, I personally don't have faith in their future.




I wrote that response quickly, but that's what I was saying:

> If I were in their shoes, I'd [do what they're doing right now and] agressively undercut the price...

I also agree, if they're telling the truth that their plan is to make their earnings off the data, yes I don't have faith either. I'm saying, if they managed to pull a miracle and get a majority of the movie-going public on to movie pass, they could be in a position to then negotiate with the theaters (and other forces down the line) to strong-arm their way into profitability. Even if it's just "oh hey pay us and we'll feature your theatre to our users in the area".

This is all conjecture, arm-chair theory.


I think you’re underestimating the leverage MoviePass could have over cinemas (and thus the studios who dictate terms to cinemas). As an extreme example, imagine MoviePass tells AMC that if they don’t cut some rev share deal, MoviePass will turn off AMC support and drive their price-sensitive customers to competing cinemas.




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