Original Post
Written by
Edited January 10, 2024
at 12:43 PM
by
FanFlix
For those interested
Note, must purchase a
minimum of (
2) digital films (
but may purchase more) for pricing. Films are
not Movies Anywhere (
MA) compatible due to being thru Paramount Pictures Studios
- Paramount Digital Films [fanflix.co]
- 2 for $9.98
- Example Title(s)
- 4K Films
- Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (2023)
- Kingpin (1996)
- 80 For Brady (2023)
- Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001)
- Lara Croft: Tomb Raider: Cradle of Life (2003)
- Varsity Blues (1999) $7.99
- HD Films
- Old School (2003)
- Old School : Unrated and Out of Control (2003)
- South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999)
- Good Will Hunting (1997)
- Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002)
- Nacho Libre (2006)
- Rounders (1998)
- The Brothers Grimm (2005)
- Serendipity (2001)
- Shakespeare In Love (1999)
- Kate & Leopold (2001)
- Smart People (2008)
- Playing By Heart (1998)
- The Cider House Rules (2000)
- Malena (2000)
- The Barbarian Invasions (2003)
- Cold Mountain (2003)
- The Shipping News (2002)
- Fresh (1994)
- Albino Alligator (1996)
- Sling Blade (1996)
- Into the Wild (2007)
- Clueless (1995)
- The Brady Bunch Movie (1995)
- A Very Brady Sequel (1996)
- Chocolat (2001)
- Dirty Pretty Things (2002)
- 54 (1998)
- 54 (Director's Cut) (1998)
- Proof (2005)
- In the Bedroom (2001)
- Scary Movie (2000)
- Scary Movie 2 (2001)
- Scary Movie 3 (2003)
- Scary Movie 3.5: Unrated (2005)
- Percy Vs. Goliath (2021)
- My Boss's Daughter (2003)
- Texas Rangers (2002)
31 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Featured Comments
The big players who aren't in Movies Anywhere are Paramount, MGM and Lionsgate. The issue is over Disney owning Movies Anywhere and having them charge a large yearly licensing fee to the other studios that isn't discounted based on their library size.
Paramount is a $10 billion dollar studio. They aren't going to shut down. Their movie library will ensure someone will buy them out. I'm not sure who pays the streaming server fees, but I'm guessing that is why Movies Anywhere doesn't do TV shows (low value for the large amount of streaming server data someone has to host).
Having a problem deciding on a second movie that doesn't often drop as low as $5.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Riptide360
The big players who aren't in Movies Anywhere are Paramount, MGM and Lionsgate. The issue is over Disney owning Movies Anywhere and having them charge a large yearly licensing fee to the other studios that isn't discounted based on their library size.
Paramount is a $10 billion dollar studio. They aren't going to shut down. Their movie library will ensure someone will buy them out. I'm not sure who pays the streaming server fees, but I'm guessing that is why Movies Anywhere doesn't do TV shows (low value for the large amount of streaming server data someone has to host).
The logic you spew is mind blowing.
Having a problem deciding on a second movie that doesn't often drop as low as $5.
The logic you spew is mind blowing.
But more likley to cut streaming purchases vs a bankruptcy - its possible someone one day gets greedy and says shut this catalog down.
Not likely, thus the reason I have nearly 1500 movies / tv shows via MoviesAnywhere / Vudu(Fandago)
Having a problem deciding on a second movie that doesn't often drop as low as $5.
It actually has never been $5 until now. Waited all damn year for a $5 sale and finally bit on the $10 4K BD deal over Christmas, so of course it goes on sale now.
In 4 Tomb Raider at least since I'm missing those.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
The logic you spew is mind blowing.
You must not understand how the service works. It copies the license to all other platforms. If a platform shuts down, your copy exists on another platform.
MoviesAnywhere is a catalyst/ bridge to all other services. They are not interconnected. If MoviesAnywherw shuts down, the bridge is disconnected but the copies are still on their respective platforms.
I agree with other posters about certain platforms never shutting down, but it is a possibility and it could happen. Apple could shut down their service in favor of a better platform and decide to not migrate their data. That would be consumer suicide but it's just an example I wanted to provide
I (former D&D player) and gf, who never played and is hit or miss w/ fantasy movies, thought it was a really fun movie.
Didn't Blockbuster have digital video ownership? Heck, that was a multi billion dollar company that completely shuttered.
Not to mention you agreed to the TOS, the company doesn't have to shut down to pull the plug or start charging you monthly fees to access your 'owned' content. And who knows what 3rd party will own that part of the company next week. Paramount can still be around yet sell off that section of the company to free up cash or unload a low / unprofitable part of their org.
Not saying it will happen, just isn't impossible or even unlikely as billion dollar companies close every day of the week.
"52% of Companies in the Fortune 500 List Have Disappeared Over the Last 20 Years"
https://finance.yahoo.c