i joined MoviePass in 2013 and over the next few years watched 6-10 movies [in theaters] per month for just $35 bucks.

MoviePass is like ClassPass for movies, except they didn’t fail and it’s a lot better.

in light of the recent price drop to $9.99 /month, i’m sharing thoughts on why MoviePass has the opportunity to control what films are made, with which talent, and how they’re distributed to consumers.

first, a brief review of the movie business epicenter: the theater.

origin of movie theaters

the first motion picture projected in the US was in 1896 at Koster and Bial’s in New York City.

around 10 years later the Nickelodeon, or “nickel” (5 cent) movie style made its debut, increasing the popularity and accessibility of film.

motion pictures remained silent and dull until the late 1920s, however, when advancements in audio technology gave films life — dialogue.

prior to embedded audio, presentation investments were made to engage movie-goers, in near parallel chronology to increasing film budgets:

1900’s – resident pianist, improvising

1910’s – specialized pianist, playing loosely synchronized compositions

1920’s – pianist + orchestra (seated in the “orchestra pit,” the empty space between front row and stage)

following the introduction of audio in the early 30’s, films became even more complex (see: plot lines) and consumer intellect began to demand more mature forms of storytelling.

crude, slapstick comics such as The Three Stooges became tiresome for theater regulars, who began to prefer dramatic performances by Humphrey Bogart in the likes of Casablanca, released in 1942.

evolution of movie theaters

there are several obvious reasons folks went to the movies – back then as today – but a few less obvious ones, too.

movies were cheap

during the Depression, movies were a reliable and inexpensive(!) form of entertainment, relied upon “to escape the realities of a sluggish economy and scarce employment opportunities.”

Dr. Jim Jones expands:

“The Depression, which began in the fall of 1929, had virtually ended for the film industry by 1935. At that time attendance was back to around 80 million a week, only 10 million short the level attained just prior to the Depression.”



even during the earlier years of the depression, weekly attendance never dipped below 60 million Americans, an incredible number of people given the population of the United States in the early 1930’s was 122 million.

movies were practical

clever promotions also improved during The Depression, to assuage theater-goers who wondered if spending limited resources on movies (vs food) was a good idea.

Dr. Jones continues:

“For forty cents she got an article which would normally cost twenty cents or more at a store and also saw a double feature.” This worked to create regular customers out of women, who came back to the theatre each week until they got every piece and completed the set. This type of promotion would last for months and some even ran as long as 86 weeks.

movies had no substitute

while box office prices increased more than 15x between the early 20th century and the late 1960’s, filmmakers and theaters still enjoyed at least 1-2 elements that the majority of its consumers did not:

full-color screens

audio equipment

air conditioning

VHS tapes didn’t launch for another decade, finally debuting in 1978 in the UK, and cost nearly $3,800 when adjusting for current day inflation.

making the at-home alternative even murkier was the VHS <> Betamax “war,” which was finally won by JVC (inventors of VHS) in the early 1980’s.

movie budgets over time

the average cost to produce an MGM film in the 1920’s was $160,000. from a look at IMDB, today it costs around $139 million to make a major Hollywood film.

accounting for inflation, we can see that over 52% of the 63 most expensive movies were produced in the last 7 years:

perhaps even more interesting is the incredibly budget-friendly 1960’s.

remember: the 60’s were a perfect storm of high production value and few DIY alternatives. this was also the dawn of James Bond and several other long-running action [expensive] series.

how the box office works

according to Box Office Mojo, the number of major films released per year has grown from 161 (1980s) to more than 730 per year in 2016.

this 453% increase in content is fantastically disproportionate to the mere 33% growth in movie-goer attendance since 1980, as seen in the Theatrical Attendance timeline above.

putting together saturated availability with exponentially increased budgets, and only linear growth in movie theater attendance… what does this mean for the future of the major film industry?

John Campea wrote an interesting piece 10 years ago titled “where our money goes and why [movies] cost so much.”

in sum:

theaters (distributors) are paid on a % sliding scale

concessions are expensive because they keep theaters in business

according to John, huge movies like Star Wars command 100%(!) of box office revenues for upwards of 1 week following release.

over time this split increases from 0 – 20%, then 40%, to as high as 80% when the film is old news, aka when your grumpy uncle and his oxygen tank are alone in the theater at 2pm on a Monday.

a typical movie release cycle looks something like this:

these economics represent a paradigm for distributors, whose costs (staff) are the highest when revenue is lowest.

redefining capitalism in Hollywood

it’s long been understood that owning the means of production is a necessary ingredient for any individual or entity seeking wealth.

thus, Hollywood fronts $139 million for a film, and movie theaters “deal with” whatever scraps they’re given to click “play.”

until now. i sense a major shift in the business:

distributors are becoming the means of production, and Hollywood its mere labor force.

Netflix is a perfect example.

initially a flavorless, jokingly public utility, Netflix has since ripped off its “we show your stuff” mask to reveal Netflix Studios.

with Amazon and Hulu following suit, network independent, streaming-only movie and television now accounts for over $1 billion of the entertainment industry’s GDP.

here’s how i think this happened:

most Hollywood studios are subsidiaries of larger companies, ie Comcast / NBC, who earn subscription (predictable) revenue through Cable, Telecom, and ISP’s this business model sustains large creative losses, whereas theaters are cash-flow operations, reliant on unreliable Hollywood, much like Gamestop is a pawn to Electronic Arts and Activision Netflix is the most successful distributor because the service justifies recurring revenue, making its pockets as deep as Hollywood’s corporate benefactors

notice what isn’t dignified in this rationale: talent.

independent filmmakers outside Los Angeles with shoestring budgets and no-name actors continue to out-perform Hollywood at film festivals.

as for funding…

did you know Rocky, an independent movie written by Stallone and filmed in less than a month, cost only $4.76 million but grossed 100 times that in related sales?

or that Saw, produced for $1.2 million, sold $102 million at the box office, was filmed in 18 days, then became an 8 part franchise with over $900 million in sales?

so resource constraints aren’t a viable defense for Hollywood, either. today, great movies can be made for ~free.

the MoviePass opportunity

just as Netflix became the “or” to at-home entertainment, MoviePass can become the “where” for out-of-home entertainment.

remember, that which owns the means of production (consumers), wins.

Theaters don’t control Hollywood, because they can’t control where people watch movies, or if they watch them at all. Hollywood sort of controls the theaters, because they deliver coveted content with damned-if-you-do, damned-if-you-don’t incentive structures. MoviePass sits in between — their subscription, zero asset business model affords both a) influence over a growing membership base, and b) immunity from flop releases or predatory revenue shares.

so here’s the deal.

suppose 1 million people subscribe to MoviePass in a 250-mile radius that includes 1-2 major markets (metropolitan areas).

Hollywood wants to generate $15-20 million per each of the top 10 markets in the United States to generate $200mm at the box office for a film that costs $139m (today’s average) to produce.

because MoviePass visitors only go to theaters whitelisted on the app, doesn’t this give MoviePass the power to control up to 10% of Hollywood’s revenues?

what if MoviePass garners millions of users across the country?

a few things could happen:

movie theaters will offer MoviePass a significant (30-50%) cut of their cut

MoviePass will require all theaters on-platform to grant similar allowances

the only theaters in business will be those anointed by MoviePass

MoviePass makes as much money as AMC, rent-free

MoviePass tells Hollywood which films they will or will not “pay for” by disabling specific ticket purchases in 1 stroke

think this is exciting? so do i.

the plausibility of it reminds me of this illuminating piece on the economics of food delivery companies like Seamless, and their impact on the restaurant business as a whole.

don’t want to click? here’s the tl;dr:

as restaurants grew accustomed to done-for-you marketing by aggregators, they stopped innovating their own mechanisms for attracting patrons, and are now beholden to wherever they rank on a search result page for filters “Chinese” and “4+ stars” and “under 30 minutes estimated delivery.”

what this means for consumers

fierce competition isn’t always great for consumers; sometimes it only serves to confuse and frustrate, as is the case with Lyft vs Uber.

both services are basically the same, drivers and riders alike use both apps, and the reality of their existence is realized by “multi-tasking” iPhones to compare rates.

in the movie business, on the other hand, theaters are very much involved in the experience, especially as perks like assigned seating, reclining chairs, and table service fuel renovations around the country.

similar to the Groupon phenomenon, where “deal seekers” became loyal to the coupon vs the service provider, MoviePass can become the brand consumers trust in film, vs theaters themselves.

this is thanks to 1 key difference between MoviePass and the theaters with which it collaborates:

theaters want you to see ALL their movies, else they don’t get paid

MoviePass only wants you to watch the BEST movies, so they get paid more

because MoviePass’ interests align with consumers, this creates an opportunity that never existed in the Hollywood → Theater → Consumer dichotomy: trust.

what this means for producers

One Hollywood executive apparently remarked that “the destruction of Rotten Tomatoes… [is] at the very top of his goals for next year,” according to data scientist Yves Bergquist in his analysis of Box Office Economics.

Yves compared box office sales figures with Rotten Tomatoes scores for hundreds of movies to infer the “Rotten Tomatoes Effect.”

relevant to this thought experiment, Yves found that audience scores are increasingly correlated to Critic scores:

predictors like these means the Hollywood elite can no longer bribe, coddle, or otherwise staff a few privileged “experts” to say good things about their films.

because consumers are becoming increasingly lucid at spotting good art from bad, they are more likely to trust each others’ opinions than a critic’s, whose motivations are ambiguous at best.

(a parallel scenario already happened in the food business… Zagat was the leader, then Yelp launched a successful IPO without a single critic on staff.)

what this means for MoviePass

since MoviePass is the only player sharing the consumers’ interest — identify and experience great content — they can soon curate their own reviews, in-app.

in fact, MoviePass already does this, albeit with very little emphasis:

if MoviePass improves this effort through gamification, user profiles, voting… Rotten Tomatoes will be Zagat; MoviePass will be Yelp.

imagine a walled garden, protected not by paid gatekeepers, but movie fans (experts) with no incentive to lie about a film’s entertainment value.

would that affect IMDB, Rotten Tomatoes and Fandango influence over our film consumption?

you betcha.

inevitable future of MoviePass

my favorite aspect of this new reality?

we’ve seen it before:

Yelp democratized food

Pandora, Spotify, blogs democratized music (previously dictated by DJ’s)

DIY solutions like VHS led to the 1980’s entertainment dry spell

consumers trust each other, and they [obviously] enjoy leveraging platforms and communities to extend and receive that trust.

because the mainstream system was wrought by elites of yesteryear – when films were cheap, in lesser supply, and theaters offered benefits not available at home… the jig worked for awhile.

but now, the jig is up.

parting advice

last month i rejoined MoviePass.

tapping ‘check in’ outside the box office to activate the debit card is as exciting as ever, and when i saw a movie last night, the couple in front of me used their MoviePass cards too.

i encourage you to consider MoviePass as your go-to theater fix — together, we can take back entertainment from pigs like Harvey Weinstein.