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07 Mar 2020 12:07 PM
I know Sky Store has the latest movies and you pay a premium for watching them. But I have a suspicion that not all migrate to Sky Cinema. Is that suspicion true? If not then why not? Does it effectively mean Sky Cinema is the poorer cousin to Sky Store?
And let’s not forget we pay a fair amount to Sky for that subscription plus £10/month for HD and £12/month for UHD to watch them in a higher resolution than 720*576p.. So it’s not exactly a great deal if some of those films never become available unless you pay extra.
One example is Fight Club which I chose last night as my free VIP movie. That film has never been available in Sky Cinema. Why not?
07 Mar 2020 12:50 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Ray+P wrote:
I know Sky Store has the latest movies and you pay a premium for watching them. But I have a suspicion that not all migrate to Sky Cinema. Is that suspicion true? If not then why not? Does it effectively mean Sky Cinema is the poorer cousin to Sky Store?
And let’s not forget we pay a fair amount to Sky for that subscription plus £10/month for HD and £12/month for UHD to watch them in a higher resolution than 720*576p.. So it’s not exactly a great deal if some of those films never become available unless you pay extra.
One example is Fight Club which I chose last night as my free VIP movie. That film has never been available in Sky Cinema. Why not?
No they don't all come to Sky Cinema. There are different rights for the services and other films belong to other services eg Netflix etc
This discussion has been locked
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07 Mar 2020 12:50 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Ray+P wrote:
I know Sky Store has the latest movies and you pay a premium for watching them. But I have a suspicion that not all migrate to Sky Cinema. Is that suspicion true? If not then why not? Does it effectively mean Sky Cinema is the poorer cousin to Sky Store?
And let’s not forget we pay a fair amount to Sky for that subscription plus £10/month for HD and £12/month for UHD to watch them in a higher resolution than 720*576p.. So it’s not exactly a great deal if some of those films never become available unless you pay extra.
One example is Fight Club which I chose last night as my free VIP movie. That film has never been available in Sky Cinema. Why not?
No they don't all come to Sky Cinema. There are different rights for the services and other films belong to other services eg Netflix etc
07 Mar 2020 01:09 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreSome turn up on the likes of Chanel 4 and 5 having never been shown on Sky Movies.
07 Mar 2020 01:53 PM
@SDR , right so it’s effectively a second class service. Never used to be like this. I can remember back in the 90s there was a great premier every Saturday. There was no Netflix back then so they had more power.
08 Mar 2020 05:49 PM
@Ray+P wrote:@SDR , right so it’s effectively a second class service. Never used to be like this. I can remember back in the 90s there was a great premier every Saturday. There was no Netflix back then so they had more power.
It's not the 90s anymore though... and Sky are not the only game in town. We have Netflix, Amazon, Starzplay, Shudder, Mubi, and Disney Plus on its way.... there are more places for studios and distributors to sell their films and more services fighting for market share.
08 Mar 2020 06:27 PM
@Plektrum “It's not the 90s anymore though... and Sky are not the only game in town. We have Netflix, Amazon, Starzplay, Shudder, Mubi, and Disney Plus on its way.... there are more places for studios and distributors to sell their films and more services fighting for market share. ”
So it’s a diluted product but Sky are still charging as much as they’ve always done. Poor value for money. 🤨
08 Mar 2020 07:28 PM - last edited: 08 Mar 2020 07:30 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out moreYes, it's called maximising investment. Sky are likely to need to pay a lot more now than they ever did for movies as its a seller's market - the studio has the power because they can sell to so many more platforms now. So Sky need to pay the asking price or risk not having any decent movies at all. They may have fewer movies but their outlay is probably more, hence the pricing.
Subscribing isn't compulsory.
08 Mar 2020 09:29 PM
@Ray+P wrote:@Plektrum “It's not the 90s anymore though... and Sky are not the only game in town. We have Netflix, Amazon, Starzplay, Shudder, Mubi, and Disney Plus on its way.... there are more places for studios and distributors to sell their films and more services fighting for market share. ”
So it’s a diluted product but Sky are still charging as much as they’ve always done. Poor value for money. 🤨
Well as @Rhonny says subscribing isn't compulsory - as a customer it's for you to assign value to what you're paying for.
The market is different - studios are making fewer movies yet there are more movies being made than ever; streamers are acquiring and making their own product by going straight to the talent and that's reducing what's out there and making the market more competitive - and Sky themselves are doing that too to ensure they have an attractive portfolio of content... and despite all that, yet now they still have more first run studio movies than their main competitors and still adding more new content (to varying levels of quality) than they did just a few years ago.
Its not a diluted product as much as one that reflects the current state of the business.
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