MoviePass, MovieCrash Review: An Insightful Exploration of Golden Ticket Dreams and Disrupted Visions

How reckless expansion and founder displacement doomed a promising startup

As the opening credits began to roll, I found myself transported back to that wildly optimistic period when a little red debit card offered the thrill of the cinema every single day. Muta’Ali’s documentary MoviePass, MovieCrash takes us on a nostalgic trip down memory lane, revisiting the moment when an ingenious startup gave us unrestricted access to the magic of movies for just ten bucks a month.

For a brief shining era, those of us lucky enough to sign up felt like we’d discovered the ultimate loophole, a secret cinema club where every film was always “buy one, get one free.” Who could resist seeing that new blockbuster at least twice when the second ticket was basically free? I remember cramming in afternoon matinees between classes or popping into indie films on impulsive whims, safe in the knowledge it wouldn’t cost me a penny more. MoviePass became a daily ritual, as integral to my routine as that morning coffee.

Of course, it was too good to last. Whispers began that this business model couldn’t possibly be sustainable, and sure enough the dream soon came crashing down as restrictions tightened. By the time cancellation arrived, we’d been through every stage of grief—denial, anger, bargaining, sadness—having finally accepted the end was inevitable.

Looking back through rose-tinted glasses, it feels like those glory days of MoviePass belonged to a different era altogether. But Muta’Ali’s documentary does a beautiful job of transporting us back, if only for 90 bittersweet minutes.

The Golden Age of MoviePass

Just imagine it – unlimited movies, every single day, for a mere ten bucks a month. Sounds too good to be true, right? But in the summer of 2017, that dream became a reality thanks to the vision of two entrepreneurs who had been cultivating their idea behind the scenes for over a decade. Stacy Spikes and Hamet Watt had founded MoviePass with a mission to reinvent the moviegoing experience, and their innovative subscription model was about to take the world by storm.

MoviePass, MovieCrash Review

At its core, the concept was beautifully simple: offer customers an affordable flat rate for accessing theaters nationwide. Spikes and Watt believed this would not only drive higher attendance, but also foster a new appreciation for cinema as an art form. They spent years refining the logistics, adding features like a prepaid debit card to enable seamless check-ins. When the service quietly relaunched in 2015 with modest pricing tiers, it only seemed a matter of time before their vision caught fire.

Then came the $10/month promotion of 2017 – and ignite it did. Word spread like wildfire online and in theaters that you could now see one movie per day to your heart’s content at that price point. Suddenly MoviePass leapt from 20,000 to over 2 million subscribers in only a few months. Theaters were noticing a major uptick in foot traffic too. Even hardcore movie buffs who visited multiple times a week found themselves wondering how this business model could possibly last.

But last it did, through that entire banner year of 2018. Spikes and Watt, the first Black founders of a major startup in the film industry, had truly transformed the moviegoing landscape with their brilliantly executed idea. For those giddy months, we faithful subscribers freely indulged our cinema passions, carefree thanks to that trusty red debit card burning a hole in our wallets each week. It really did feel too good to be true…and as we all know, it was. But for one fleeting moment, Stacy Spikes and Hamet Watt had let the movies reign supreme.

The Tide Turns

MoviePass was riding high in 2017, enjoying unprecedented growth thanks to the vision of founders Stacy Spikes and Hamet Watt. Their $10 per month subscription model was inspiring a new generation of movie fans. But behind the scenes, ambitions were shifting toward expansion at all costs.

It was then that Helios and Matheson Analytics acquired a majority stake in the company. Overnight, Ted Farnsworth became the new chairman, bringing on Mitch Lowe as CEO to replace Spikes. While Spikes and Watt continued advising at first, it was clear a change had come. Gone were the days of careful nurturing – Farnsworth aimed for massive numbers, and fast.

Lowe set an aggressive goal of 5 million subscribers within a year. But the price of $10 a month, which had fueled their success, would not sustain this kind of growth. Without lowering costs or raising prices, MoviePass was heading for trouble. Still, the spending accelerated. Lowe splashed out on sponsorship deals and events, even backing Hollywood films in the name of “market testing.”

As money melted away at a rate of $30 million per month, cracks started to show. Customer support collapsed under the inflated workload. Theaters too were tiring of MoviePass, as overuse drove up their own costs. But to Farnsworth and Lowe, subscriber count remained the sole focus.

It wasn’t long before Spikes and Watt found themselves sidelined completely. Though they created MoviePass, their more prudent approach was no longer wanted. The board swapped to an all-white leadership. As finances spiraled out of control, the founders watched their dreams sink along with the sinking ship.

By 2018, drastic measures were taken to stem the bleeding. But it was too little, too late. After a year under new management, MoviePass was left as nothing but a cautionary tale of ambition overtaking reason. A company that once inspired was now just another casualty of unsustainable growth.

Troubled Times

The substantial growth under new leadership came at an increasingly steep cost for MoviePass. Subsidizing ticket prices to the tune of millions per month was simply unsustainable.

Yet Lowe and Farnsworth continued ramping up spending without restraint. Major events like sponsoring Dennis Rodman at Coachella delivered no clear return for the business. It seemed they prioritized hype over sensible finances.

Behind the scenes, the situation grew more precarious. Employees testified to plunging morale as pressures and restrictions intensified. Customers faced an evolving maze of terms and conditions just to use a service they paid for.

As losses stacked into the hundreds of millions, suspicions emerged of the leaders overpromising on profits. Regulators took notice when the stock price swung wildly despite the bleeding reality.

When even desperate ploys to discourage moviegoing failed to stop the red ink, collapse became inevitable. Though the end was foreseeable, it came as a blow to those who felt MoviePass filled theaters with joy.

In the aftermath, founders Spikes and Watt could only watch their vision dismantled. Yet accountability may yet come for those whose ambitious plans decimated what was built. As legal proceedings continue, questions linger over where the line was crossed from taking risks to engagement with securities Law. Through it all, the memory of a service that sparked passion for cinema endures, however briefly, it reigned for movie lovers everywhere.

Getting their fill, then feeling the squeeze

Nothing captured folks’ imaginations quite like the early promise of MoviePass. For just ten bucks a month, you could catch flick after flick to your heart’s content. Folks loved indulging their movie mania without restraint.

Soon lines stretched down the block on weekends. Box offices saw top titles packed with new faces. Families and friends made moviegoing a daily habit, sampling genres they’d ignored before.

But pressures began taking their toll behind the scenes. As losses stacked up with each swipe of the debit cards, management grew desperate to slow the bleeding. Extra hoops and surprises started popping up in the fine print.

Changing showtimes vanished without warning. Frequent fliers found themselves frozen out on new releases. Customers coping with the shifting sands of “unlimited” access grew frustrated. As MoviePass floundered in its spending spree, their goodwill got spent down too.

While the early days awakened an excitement for cinema, the end brought bitterness for some. Others simply mourned the loss of their cinematic oasis, left to hope a new model could satisfy fans without plunging off a financial cliff. In the end, MoviePass gave its users a brief taste of movie magic, before reality closed the curtain on their unlimited show.

The End of Unlimited Movies

Things went south fast after MoviePass let folks see one flick a day for a decade. First they started blocking certain showtimes, which ticked off subscribers used to free rein. Then prices jumped without warning while the selection got slimmer.

It wasn’t too hard to see why. Turns out it doesn’t pay to let folks watch every new release to hit theaters that month, no questions asked, for the fee of a cheap burger. Money was hemorrhaging and management started getting desperate. But cutting access so severely soured many on the service altogether.

Before long, headlines told of missing funds and strange spending. MoviePass splashed cash like a startup going stratospheric, not one teetering at the edge. Lavish stunts and strange investments had folks asking hard questions. Prosecutors came sniffing around the books and didn’t like what they found.

By 2019 it was over. Subscribers abandoned ship in droves as the experience sunk from a dream deal into disappointment. MoviePass declared bankruptcy, crushed under losses that mounted faster than reward points at the local mini-mart.

For co-founders shoved aside earlier, seeing their vision capsized must have hurt. But two others in the driver’s seat now face justice for their role steering MoviePass onto the rocks. Trials are coming that could land the former leaders in even hotter water.

In the end, the age of unlimited movies was a flash in the pan. But what a ride it was while that red debit card packed such magic. Few will ever forget getting their fill of flicks for just ten bucks—at least, until the well ran dry.

The Final Act

MoviePass seemed like a dream when it let us watch movies whenever we wanted for just ten bucks. But those golden days didn’t last long once new bosses took the stage.

This doc does a solid job tracing how it all went down. At first there was Stacy and Hamet, who created MoviePass with a vision to make flicks more accessible. For years they stewarded it steady. Then Mitch and Ted swept in and everything changed overnight.

Suddenly subscribers dealt with all kinds of nonsense – shows blacked out, prices zigzagging for no reason. Meanwhile bosses partied hard while ignoring clear signs the ship was sinking. No surprise it all crashed before we knew it.

Now Stacy’s fighting to save what’s left of MoviePass while Mitch faces fraud charges. Justice may come yet for the folks who wrecked such a cool idea. As for us customers, those magic months we’ll never forget, seeing any film whenever the mood struck.

While this documentary doesn’t dwell in drama or accusations, it paints a clear picture. MoviePass thrived because good leaders nurtured it with care. But once reckless new handlers took over just to inflate numbers, the end was clear as day.

Some salty tales linger on from that wild ride. And this doc serves as a nice memento of those times we all crowded cinemas whenever whimsy struck thanks to our trusty red cards. For a short while, MoviePass made movie-magic every single day.

The Review

MoviePass, MovieCrash

8 Score

Muta'Ali's documentary serves as an entertaining yet insightful look at MoviePass' meteoric rise and fall. By reframing the narrative around the visionary founders pushed aside, it brings a thoughtful perspective few expected. While not without flaws, the film succeeds in memorializing that magical period for movie fans and illustrating key business lessons in a highly engaging manner.

PROS

  • Provides novel reframing of MoviePass story with focus on founders' experience
  • Insightful blend of interviews and cultural commentary Capture nostalgia of MoviePass' early subscriber period
  • Engaging presentation of complex business breakdown and leadership challenges

CONS

  • Some repetitiveness that potentially prolongs runtime
  • Limited archival footage restricts illustrating certain events
  • Lacks depth on contribution of smaller players like Rodman promoter

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 8
Exit mobile version