Los Angeles Times

MoviePass hits more turbulence

Customers report problems canceling their subscripti­ons.

- By Ryan Faughnder ryan.faughnder @latimes.com Twitter: @rfaughnder

Cash-strapped cinema subscripti­on service MoviePass faced another setback this week as customers tried to cancel their subscripti­ons and complained on social media when they apparently weren’t able to do so.

MoviePass, which charges $9.95 a month for access to theatrical films, has been transition­ing subscriber­s to its new offering that limits moviegoers to three tickets a month — compared with its previous movie-aday service that was wildly popular and drew 3 million subscriber­s.

For some, the change did not go smoothly.

Users complained on Twitter that they had canceled their subscripti­ons, only to receive an email from MoviePass saying they’d been enrolled in the new limited plan. When they tried again to cancel, they said, they received an “error” message. MoviePass’ Twitter account was inundated with customer service complaints.

“Heads up to anyone who canceled MoviePass,” wrote one user who posted a picture of the email she received. “Surprise: You didn’t cancel MoviePass.”

MoviePass acknowledg­ed that the transition to the new plan has caused problems but said it had fixed the “bugs” in its service and denied that any cancellati­on requests had been blocked.

“On Monday, we learned that some members encountere­d difficulty with the cancellati­on process,” MoviePass said in a statement. “We have fixed the bugs that were causing the issue, and we have confirmed that none of our members have been opted-in or converted to the new plan without their express permission.

“In addition, all cancellati­on requests are being correctly processed and no members were being blocked from canceling their accounts.”

MoviePass has frequently changed its service to reduce the amount of cash it burns since first lowering its monthly fee to less than $10 a year ago.

Analysts have long predicted MoviePass’ demise because of its money-losing business model of subsidizin­g nearly unlimited moviegoing for its subscriber­s. Customers use an app to select a showtime, and the company loads the full price of the ticket onto a debit card for the customer to swipe at the box office.

Last month, MoviePass said it would raise prices by 50% and cut access to popular new films in order to preserve the business, a move widely interprete­d as a sign that the end was near. MoviePass later backtracke­d on the price increase but said a new three-movie-a-month limit would take effect Aug. 15.

At the time, MoviePass said in a statement that only 15% of its subscriber­s had used the service to watch four or more movies a month, and that the new model would have “no impact whatsoever on over 85% of our subscriber­s.”

MoviePass’ woes have weighed heavily on the stock of its New York parent company, data firm Helios & Matheson Analytics Inc. Its stock has fallen nearly 100% this year, ending Tuesday trading at 5 cents a share on the Nasdaq.

Companies risk being delisted from the exchange if their stock trades below $1 for 30 days.

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