Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

MoviePass slashes number of movies subscriber can see

- By Miranda Moore

MoviePass will reduce the number of movies its subscriber­s can see by 90 percent, with subscriber­s in the $9.95 monthly fee tier seeing their movie allowance decrease from one per day to three per month.

The change will be rolled out starting Aug. 15, the latest in a series of changes to the company’s customer experience­s as it struggles to stay afloat.

The company said in a statement that the new limit, which is supposed to reduce the amount of cash MoviePass burns through, will only affect the 15 percent of its subscriber­s who see more than three movies per month using the service.

MoviePass also announced Monday morning that it has reversed its decision, announced less than a week ago, to hike its monthly subscripti­on fee to $14.95 per month. The reversal comes after a customer outcry; the $9.95 monthlyfee will remain in place.

In multiple statements issued over the past week, the company attributes its recent turbulence to growing pains that are expected when a so-called “disruptor” startup company enters the marketplac­e. The company brought in Netflix co-founder Mitch Lowe to run the service, and he promptly lowered the monthly subscripti­on rate and increased the number of movies users could see.

While these changes brought in a rush of new customers to the service founded in 2011, the cost to keep them proved too much for the company to sustain. MoviePass pays full price for each ticket a subscriber uses, meaning that after a subscriber sees a second movie in a month, the company is operating at a loss.

It didn’t take long for the company to burn through all its cash reserves, and it had to take out a $6 million emergency loan two weeks ago to pay for subscriber­s’ tickets.

Two law firms announced on Monday that they have begun seeking defendants for class action litigation against MoviePass parent company Helios and Matheson Analytics, claiming that the company over-inflated MoviePass’ profitabil­ity when presenting informatio­n to investors, who then lost money.

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