It’s curtains for movie subscription trailblazer MoviePass.

The cash-strapped service, known for a failed experiment to sell unlimited movie tickets for $10 a month, is shuttering for good on September 14, parent company Helios and Matheson Analytics announced Friday.

MoviePass subscribers were notified by Helios that the struggling service was being shut down because “efforts to recapitalize MoviePass have not been successful to date.”

Helios has formed a strategic review committee to explore “strategic and financial alternatives” moving forward, it said.

The announcement sent Helios’ stock down more than 10 percent, to less than two hundreths of a penny.

MoviePass made waves in August 2017 when it lowered its prices from as much as $50 per month to a flat rate of $10 per month for unlimited access to theatrical release films.

The all-you-can-watch deal drew a feeding frenzy that spurred a $127 million quarterly loss last summer.

In a botched effort to stem the looses, the company then drew the ire of subscribers by blocking them from blockbuster releases such as “Mission: Impossible” on their opening weekend.

Earlier this summer, MoviePass was subjected to surprise shutdown that executives said was in order to make improvements to its app. The shutdown came just hours after the premiere of Disney’s juggernaut “Spider-Man: Far From Home,” which proceeded to bring in nearly $100 million domestically in its first three days.

In an interview with The Post earlier this year, Ted Farnsworth, CEO of Helios, blamed MoviePass’ financial woes not on its business model, but on fraud and abuse of the service.

Abuses included binge-watching of the same films over and over; buying tickets for friends and family not on the plan and, in some cases, buying a movie ticket just “to go to the restroom in Times Square,” Farnsworth said.