Photograph the stub anyway. Vickie has done that and been reimbursed for films she has had to pay for with her debit card. It sounds like your local theater isn't making it easy for MoviePass or anyone else to get their showtimes. You might talk to the manager and let them know they are losing money. I don't know how the times get to either Fandango or MoviePass, but as bad as theaters are doing these days, it's just dumb to neglect any avenue to customers.
Yes, I was compensated like that on a previous occasion. These days, I simply get no response from customer service, at all. Literally none. Having lived in and near some serious movie theater hubs all my life, I am now in a movie desert - literally one theater within 45 minutes drive. It seems like they just don't care whether they stay in business or not.
I'm seeing 2-3 movies a week with mp. Enjoying it a lot. My latest mp movie last night was Goodbye Christopher Robin. Good movie imho.... Goodbye Christopher Robin | Fox Searchlight
Disagree - sometimes a crowd reaction makes a movie less funny! Example: I saw "Home Alone" 2X in theaters. The first showing was a matinee with a sparse crowd and I enjoyed it - didn't love it, but was entertained/amused. 2nd time was at a second-run theater and it was packed. The crowd went wild with laughter and it became an actual turnoff. The crowd reaction was so over the top (IMO) that it harmed the comedy - I spent more time thinking "geez, it's not that funny" than laughing!
There was a group of people cackling their heads off to the trailer for "Snatched" (the recent Goldie Hawn exercise in submentality) in a theater I was in, and I took it as a sign of impending End Times.
Yeah, I've seen that happen - people laugh at trailers that look really terrible! I would agree in general that laughter is infectious and a comedy works better in a group, but exceptions do occur - the fact I still remember that "Home Alone" screening 27 years later shows that!
I'm not into slapstick, and there will be people laughing at that stuff when I'm not, so I can see that. But generally speaking, I still think comedy is better with a crowd. We saw the musical version of The Producers in an almost empty theater, and it seemed like Nathan Lane and the cast were playing for the rafters. We didn't find it funny, but I suspected that if we had seen it in a crowded one it might have been.
There I agree - but you said always better! My "Home Alone" experience was interesting because it's not the material itself that was the turn-off - it's not like I simply hated the movie, as I'd already seen it and enjoyed it. It really was the over-the-top reaction of the crowd that became the turn-off!
I hope MoviePass is still around in the mid-2020s, after I retire. I’ll be looking for ways to fill all my free time, and this program will help me save money in the process.
I saw Blazing Saddles yesterday (which I would never have gone to had I not had a Movie Pass), and it was a small crowd but they laughed quite loud at every gag. Felt almost like a laugh track on a TV show.
I've used mine once since I got it. Would have used it twice - but the theater I like with the biggest non-Imax screen in town is no longer available in the app. (It's a "Titan XC" screen so it's excluded now.) I think I'll just cancel Moviepass - I don't like going to theaters anymore and even low cost isn't making me want to go back. If i watched a lot of films and didn't care about screen size or sound, it'd be a good deal - but it's not for me.
I'm pleasantly surprised to hear that "Blazing Saddles" wasn't blacked out on the MP app as a "special presentation" (Fathom Events showings of vintage films are never available, at least not in my experience).
Must need a cash infusion (getting people to pay a year upfront). It won't last, but I'm taking full advantage!
Yeah, the "billed annually" thing kind scares me away. What if they bill me tomorrow and then go belly up a month from now?
Its a gamble but $10 or less lost for the ability to watch a half dozen or more movies a month for that price seems like a worthwhile gamble. If you go a half a year and then they go belly up and you loose that last months fee, I don't see that as much of a loss.
I could do the same here, but I won't - I could probably average 2 movies a week if I worked on it. $90 would be about 7 movies a week!