27 Oct 2023 12:04 PM
@DanielF @Anonymous Sky
I understand the fnaf movie is available to pre-order with no release date confirmed. Am I right in thinking that it won't be released today then? Its just my daughter is frantically waiting to watch and I don't want her disappointed waiting expecting it on tonight if it won't be. Kind regards
27 Oct 2023 12:19 PM - last edited: 27 Oct 2023 12:24 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
I'd suggest it's very unlikely that there will be a Sky Store date soon, even as an expensive 'Premiere', when the film has only just started physical cinema distribution.
The release to Peacock in the USA is something of an experiment to try to assess how this affects the potential cinema audience.
27 Oct 2023 12:47 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
I'd also note that Sky employees who post in these forums are unlikely to have information on commercial release dates.
27 Oct 2023 12:50 PM
When is the release date on Sky Store for Five Nights at Freddys please?
27 Oct 2023 12:52 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out morePlease read the post currently showing as the answer.
28 Oct 2023 01:53 PM
Not great communication Sky, it doesn't help that Radio times is posting incorrect information. It's gutting to all the kids that have waited to watch and now they have no idea when they'll be able to watch at all.
28 Oct 2023 02:41 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@GeorgieRhianne wrote:
Not great communication Sky, it doesn't help that Radio times is posting incorrect information. It's gutting to all the kids that have waited to watch and now they have no idea when they'll be able to watch at all.
@GeorgieRhianne if the radio times is posting incorrect information then would't it be best to contact them. If all that Sky know is that it will be available on Sky Store at some point in the future then thats all they will be able to say.
28 Oct 2023 03:04 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@GeorgieRhianne wrote:Not great communication Sky, it doesn't help that Radio times is posting incorrect information. It's gutting to all the kids that have waited to watch and now they have no idea when they'll be able to watch at all.
Sky is not responsible for third party publications. Radio Times unfortunately repeatedly put these incorrect information into these 'form articles' where their writer has to fill in blanks.
28 Oct 2023 03:12 PM
Not really, radio times is an issue for radio times. But I really don't think it should be available for preorder on sky store if they don't even have a date for when it'll be available.
28 Oct 2023 04:10 PM - last edited: 28 Oct 2023 04:11 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
That's a business decision: personally I'd suggest potential purchasers pause to consider why they would want to have Sky hold onto their money for an unknown period to 'pre-order' a digital release which by definition is fairly unlikely to run out of stock...
28 Oct 2023 04:16 PM - last edited: 28 Oct 2023 04:45 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@GeorgieRhianne wrote:
It's gutting to all the kids that have waited to watch and now they have no idea when they'll be able to watch at all.
When they are 15, perhaps?
28 Oct 2023 05:12 PM
28 Oct 2023 05:26 PM - last edited: 28 Oct 2023 05:31 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@lzzds29 wrote:
it’s not actually illegal for a person younger than 15 to watch it if someone over 18 has brought/rented it.
I think that is correct, but within sensible limits: knowingly enabling a minor to view traumatising material at home is potentially a child protection issue.
Personally I find the notion that this film or the game it is based on are particularly suitable for children rather baffling, given both are very firmly in the 'survival horror' genre: that the BBFC took a very different rating decision to the MPAA is a complicating factor.
28 Oct 2023 08:22 PM
The decision on whether children should be able to see it lies firmly in the parents common sense and depends on how mature the child is. My plan is to watch the movie in advance to see how appropriate it is as I've always done, we all know there are plenty of movies that have lower age ratings that could be described as inappropriate and vice versa.
28 Oct 2023 08:41 PM
@lzzds29 wrote:
I think you might be referring to the rating of the film, I do believe that it’s actually parents decision to let their children watch 15+ content, and this would apply as if it’s on sky it isn’t a cinema release, which is where it does apply legally, as long as the parent is obviously renting/buying it, it’s not actually illegal for a person younger than 15 to watch it if someone over 18 has brought/rented it. Maybe wrong however that’s my impression
You are correct. Whilst nobody under 15 is permitted to enter a cinema screening, the restriction on home release is that nobody under 15 may rent or buy the film.
Nobody on here has any rights whatsoever to question or doubt the parenting abilities of others. If a parent/guardian wishes for their child to watch a 15-rated movie, that's their choice as they know their own kids. Having seen the film myself last night, I'd have no issues whatsoever with letting a teenager watch it. A 15 was a push and I watch horror-esque films as the main go-to.
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