MoviePass this week surprised subscribers by pulling some AMC AMC, -0.87% theaters off its app.

The $10-a-month subscription service allows users to check in to any one of hundreds of theaters around the nation. Subscribers then pay for their movie ticket with a Mastercard, and MoviePass foots the bill. Each MoviePass customer is allowed to purchase one movie ticket every 24 hours.

But one theater chain hasn’t been so accepting of the movie subscription service. MoviePass has asked AMC to share a slice of its admission fees and/or concessions revenue, but after failing to persuade the theater chain to enter a partnership, decided to remove 10 AMC theaters from its service.

Those theaters include a 25-screen AMC in New York City’s Times Square, as well as the location at Disney Springs in Florida.

Here is a complete list of all the theaters that MoviePass removed from its service:

AMC Empire 25 (New York City)

AMC Century City 15 (Los Angeles)

AMC Mercado 20 (San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose, Calif.)

AMC Disney Springs 24 (Orlando-Daytona Beach-Melbourne, Fla.)

AMC Loews Boston Common 19 (Boston, Mass.-Manchester N.H.)

AMC River East 21 (Chicago)

AMC Mission Valley 20 (San Diego, Calif.)

AMC Tysons Corner 16 (Washington, D.C. (Hagerstown, Md.)

AMC Veterans 24 (Tampa-St. Petersburg (Sarasota) Fla.)

AMC Loews Alderwood Mall 16 (Seattle-Tacoma, Wash.)

Those 10 AMC theaters make up about 1.5% of the 660 AMC theaters in the U.S. that are otherwise accessible to MoviePass users, according to a company spokesperson.

Read more: MoviePass removes AMC theaters from its service in battle for revenue share

“Those theaters were in close proximity to other theaters that have been more supportive of MoviePass,” Ted Farnsworth, chief executive of MoviePass’s majority owner Helios & Matheson Analytics Inc. HMNY, +20.00% , told MarketWatch. “We already see in just a short time that people are going to these other theaters instead of the AMC ones.”

Many MoviePass users were caught off guard by the news that some AMC theaters were pulled. Some fans were even at the theater, ready to check in, when they found out the news.

Other fans say they are giving up on MoviePass after the ordeal.

Farnsworth initially said he would cut ties with AMC, but MoviePass decided early Friday to pull just 10 of AMC’s more than 600 theaters instead.

MoviePass drove more than 1 million ticket sales to AMC theaters last month, compared with 10,000 sales last July, the month before it cut its monthly subscription to $10 from as much as $50, said Farnsworth.

Unlike its relationship with AMC, MoviePass has struck deals with close to 1,000 independent cinemas, in which it gets a roughly $3 cut on ticket sales and/or 25% of concessions sales.