In recent years, no mainstream movie has resulted in more litigation than Dallas Buyers Club, starring Matthew McConaughey. Voltage Pictures, the studio that produced the Oscar-winning film, followed up awards season with lawsuit season, filing hundreds of cases since early 2014 against pirates alleged to have downloaded its film illegally via BitTorrent.

Now, Voltage's most litigious company has swung into action to follow a new trend: filing lawsuits against users of "Popcorn Time," an app that's been described as "BitTorrent for dummies," which allows viewing of movies through an easy-to-use, Netflix-like interface.

Dallas Buyers Club LLC filed a complaint (PDF) naming 10 anonymous Comcast subscribers in Oregon. The complaint was electronically filed on Sunday and reported earlier today by TorrentFreak. It was filed by Carl Crowell, the same attorney who has filed the other two Popcorn Time suits.

The complaint is almost identical to the other two Popcorn Time complaints filed by Crowell. It includes the same quotes from US Congressmen denouncing Internet piracy and the same argument that the use of Popcorn Time is by its nature piratical.

"[T]here is no doubt that use of Popcorn Time constitutes serious willful copyright infringement," the complaint states.

A couple dozen Popcorn Time users in Oregon should be expecting phone calls from Crowell soon. The judges overseeing the two earlier-filed cases have both authorized ex parte discovery against the users of the app, meaning Comcast will have to hand over their information unless they file a legal objection.