$25 to rent a movie? What??
Personally I would never pay for a PVOD release. It’s best to use that money to buy the Blu-ray, at least then you actually get to keep it.
Buy physical media. Fuck digital rights “access.”
They aren’t even selling the 4K versions of a lot of movies on physical media. Fuck em. Hard drives are cheap and torrents are fast.
PVOD is such a stupid rip-off. It’s basically just making sure the good quality pirated version gets out before the movie is available for a reasonable renting price.
So you’re mad that check notes pirates will have it in good quality before you rent it? Then… Be a pirate? Or don’t worry about the pirates and just worry about yourself? I’m… not seeing your particular issue. Pirates will get it regardless so how does that factor in at all?
I’m a good little consumer. I pay my Disney tax. But, errrm, “PVOD” just means “Prepare VPN, Or Delay.” At this point in my life and the media landscape, it’s mostly “Delay.”
Ohhh, so that’s why these movies came out on the open seas so quickly. I guess it’s an unintended consequence of their greed.
Yo ho ho, I wouldn’t know
What is PVOD?
PVOD (premium video-on-demand) is when you pay a one-time price to watch the movie digitally on platforms like iTunes, Amazon Prime, Vudu, Google Play, etc.
Personally, at those prices, I’d much rather wait for the Blu-ray release.
I think it stands for Premium Video on Demand
How is that different than a regular rental?
It’s not, really. What makes it “premium” is the fact that you can watch it at home while it’s still in theaters.
Oh, gotcha. Thanks. I think I’d rather go to the movies than watch it at home if that’s an option, but I’m sure some people really appreciate this option too.
Same as artisanal foods
Wonder if this is a side effect of theater ticket sales crashing like they’re made by Boeing?
IIRC, it’s something like 30% lower, so they have to make up this revenue somewhere, so PPV/PVOD/whatever prices are up and I’d be shocked if they stopped here.
That’s correct.
Fun fact: last year, The Super Mario Bros. Movie made $75 million in PVOD sales. Additionally, studios get a bigger cut of the money in PVOD - instead of splitting it half-and-half with the theaters, they get about 80% of the profits.
And the best part? It’s all digital, so there’s little to no manufacturing costs, and they won’t “run out of stock”.
It’s no wonder they’re focusing so much on digital these days.
I just wait a while to watch the movies and then it’s like 4 bucks to rent