Discount ticket service MoviePass raises prices by 50%

SHARE Discount ticket service MoviePass raises prices by 50%
ap18212605285904_e1533060113883.jpg

MoviePass, the discount service for movie tickets, is raising prices by 50 percent and barring viewings of most major releases during the first two weeks. | AP file photo

NEW YORK — MoviePass, the discount service for movie tickets, is raising prices by 50 percent and barring viewings of most major releases during the first two weeks.

The new $15-a-month rate for up to one movie each day still won’t make MoviePass profitable. Because it typically pays theaters the full cost of tickets — which can be $15 or more in big cities — a movie or two can put the service in the red. The old monthly rate was $10.

To curtail expenses, subscribers won’t be able to watch most blockbusters until the third week of release. However, a movie distributor can allow earlier viewings through MoviePass by reaching revenue-sharing or other arrangements with MoviePass.

MoviePass has proved popular with 3 million subscribers, but there are questions about whether it’s sustainable.

The Latest
The group that blocked movie-mogul George Lucas from building a museum on Soldier Field’s south parking lot says the domed stadium project could ultimately end up in court — even if filing another lawsuit is “not the first thing you want to do,” according to Gin Kilgore, acting executive director.
The initiative reportedly will cost the league $25 million per year over the next two seasons.
Guillermo Caballero Jr. was trying to drive home from a party early Sunday when violent participants of a street takeover, including one who jumped on the hood of his car, fatally shot him in the 2300 block of West 59th Street.
Police shut down the Little Village Cinco de Mayo parade Sunday after shots rang out along the route. No one was killed or injured, but people who came out to enjoy the event shouldn’t have to rejoice that their celebration didn’t turn tragic.
None of the national experts has even talked with Underwood yet, he says, so their “way-too-early” rankings aren’t worrying him. Besides, the demands of a nonstop job create enough stress as it is.