Categories
Mobile Syrup

Everything leaving Netflix, Crave and Prime Video in April 2022

As is the case every month, several shows and movies are leaving Netflix Canada, Crave and Prime in April.

It’s worth noting that the streaming services may only be removing certain shows and movies for a specific amount of time.

Series like Avatar: The Last Airbender and Gossip Girl and movies like Mean Girls have all left Netflix and then returned to the service months or years later. If you’re more interested in what’s coming to Crave and Netflix, check out our respective ‘what’s coming to’ posts.

Below are all the shows and movies leaving Netflix and Crave in April

Netflix

  • Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues (April 1st)
  • Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (April 1st)
  • Despicable Me (April 5th)
  • Despicable Me 2 (April 5th)
    Minions (April 5th)
  • The Bourne Identity (April 30th)
  • The Bourne Legacy (April 30th)
  • The Bourne Supremacy (April 30th)
  • The Bourne Ultimatum (April 30th)

Crave

  • Life’s Too Short: Season 1 (April 7th)
  • Think Like A Dog (April 8th)
  • Planet of the Humans (April 12th)
  • Random Acts of Violence (April 14th)
  • Rogue Earth (April 14th)
  • American Woman (April 16th)
  • Supermarket Sweep: Season 1 (April 17th)
  • Anthropocene: The Human Epoch (April 19th)
  • ETalk: A Bell Let’s Talk Day Special (April 25th)
  • 2019 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (April 25th)
  • Viena and the Fantomes (April 29th)
  • 1917 (April 30th)
  • 3:10 To Yuma (April 30th)
  • A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas (April 30th)
  • Afghan Luke (April 30th)
  • American Psycho (April 30th)
  • Aquamarine (April 30th)
  • Beautiful Creatures (April 30th)
  • Blood Quantum (April 30th)
  • Can You Keep A Secret? (April 30th)
  • Crank (April 30th)
  • Crank 2: High Voltage (April 30th)
  • Dolittle (April 30th)
  • East of Eden (April 30th)
  • Enchantimals: Spring into Harvest Hills (April 30th)
  • Enchantimals: Tales From the Everwilde: Season 1 (April 30th)
  • Enemy (April 30th)
  • Four Kids and It (April 30th)
  • Gabrielle (April 30th)
  • Hall Pass (April 30th)
  • J. Edgar (April 30th)
  • Man Down (April 30th)
  • One Survivor Remembers (April 30th)
  • Parental Guidance (April 30th)
  • Punisher: War Zone (April 30th)
  • Ride Like A Girl (April 30th)
  • Sexy Beast (April 30th)
  • The Firm (April 30th)
  • The Hangover Part II (April 30th)
  • The Hunt (April 30th)
  • The Hurt Locker (April 30th)
  • The Ides of March (April 30th)
  • The Iron Lady (April 30th)
  • The Mechanic (April 30th)
  • The Wolfman (April 30th)
  • Things I Do For Money (April 30th)
  • W. (April 30th)
  • Zero Dark Thirty (April 30th)

Prime Video

  • Rambo: Last Blood (04/01/22)
  • The Lighthouse (04/06/22)
  • The Rhythm Section (04/12/22)
  • Line of Duty (04/13/22)
  • Little Monsters (04/13/22)
  • Fahrenheit 11/9 (04/18/22)
  • King Of Thieves (04/24/22)

Image credit: Netflix 

Source: IMDB

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Game of Thrones prequel ‘House of the Dragon’ hits Crave on August 21

Game of Thrones prequel House of the Dragon is coming to Crave on August 21st.

MobileSyrup has received a statement from a Crave spokesperson confirming that the series will hit the subscription platform on the same date as it will in the U.S.

The series is set to air 300 years before the events of Game of Thrones and tells the story of the House of Targaryen.

House of the Dragon stars Paddy Considine, Olivia Cooke, Matt Smith, Emma D’Arcy and Fabien Frankel, Rhys Ifans, Steve Toussaint, Eve Best and Sonoya Mizuno. And the series is set to have 10 episodes.

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Here are Netflix, Crave, Disney+ and other streamers’ password sharing rules

As you’ve probably already heard, Netflix recently announced plans to begin charging users for password sharing as part of a test in three countries: Chile, Costa Rica and Peru.

The company has told MobileSyrup that it has no plans to expand that test to Canada, but people are nonetheless still apprehensive. After all, Netflix itself said in its original blog post announcing the test that “accounts are being shared between households — impacting our ability to invest in great new TV and films for our members.” Analysts have also estimated that Netflix could earn around $1.6 billion USD (about $2.01 billion CAD) in additional annual revenue were it to introduce the fees globally.

In any event, we’ll have to wait and see how Netflix responds to the initial test. That said, one thing that Netflix pointed out in its original blog post is that there’s been “confusion about when and how Netflix can be shared.” There’s certainly some merit to that — while sharing is listed as being against the company’s terms of service, it’s never actually cracked down on that before. Other companies have taken largely hands-off approaches, despite what their respective rules might state.

With that in mind, we’ve rounded up what each major streamer’s official stance is on password sharing. We’ve also reached out to each for comment on possible adjustments of these policies in the wake of Netflix’s password sharing paywall test. Read on for a full breakdown.

Amazon Prime Video

Amazon Prime Video is included with a $79 CAD/year Amazon Prime subscription. Per the service’s terms, there aren’t any specific limits on password sharing. Instead, users “are responsible for maintaining the confidentiality of your account and password and for restricting access to your account, and you agree to accept responsibility for all activities that occur under your account or password.”

Amazon did not respond when asked for comment on whether it may change its policies on password sharing in response to Netflix.

Full Amazon Prime Video terms and conditions here.

Apple TV+

Apple TV+ costs $5.99/month and is also included in ‘Apple One’ subscription bundles, which start at $15.95/month.

Apple actually actively promotes password sharing through its ‘Family Sharing’ feature. Once set up, this will allow you and five other people to share the same Apple services including, but not limited to, Apple TV+.

Apple did not respond to a request for comment.

Full terms and conditions here.

Crave

The Bell-owned service allows your account to be registered on up to five devices at a time. This is only for the main $19.99/month Crave Total membership; the $9.99/month Mobile plan only allows streams on mobile and the web.

A Bell spokesperson told MobileSyrup the company currently has “no plans” to update these policies.

Full Crave terms and conditions here.

Disney+

Disney costs $11.99/month or $119.99/year and currently doesn’t have any explicit restrictions on password sharing. In fact, the service’s subscriber agreement acknowledges that users may share their passwords, but they’re solely responsible for maintaining the “confidentiality and security” of their accounts.

The company has previously said it plans to continue to allow password sharing, but that statement was, admittedly, made a couple of years.

It should be noted that the company has an ambitious goal of reaching 230 and 260 million subscribers by 2024, and it currently sits at over 130 million. While initiatives like continued global expansions and lower-cost, ad-supported tiers later in 2022 will no doubt help with that, it remains to be seen whether the company will look to charging for password sharing as another option.

Disney did not respond to a request for comment.

Full Disney+ terms and conditions here.

Netflix

Following a recent price increase, a ‘Basic’ Netflix subscription costs $9.99/month, a ‘Standard’ subscription (HD-supported) costs $16.49/month and a ‘Premium’ membership is priced at $20.99/month (4K-supported).

As mentioned, Netflix’s terms of use do actually explicitly state that passwords cannot be shared. “The Netflix service and any content accessed through the service are for your personal and non-commercial use only and may not be shared with individuals beyond your household,” writes the company.

Of course, the streamer hasn’t actively cracked down on this; instead, it’s only tested an in-app message that reminded users that password sharing isn’t allowed. In 2019, the company said it was exploring a “consumer-friendly” way to limit password sharing, although the response to the paywall tests has been less than positive overall. For context, the company is planning to charge around $2 to 3 USD (about $2.50 to $3.75 CAD) to share accounts with two other users in these test countries. It remains to be seen how pricing might be altered in different markets should the test be expanded.

Full Netflix terms and conditions here.


That’s what we know for now, but we’ll be sure to update this story should these services — particularly Netflix — make any changes.

As it stands, would you remain subscribed to these services if they began to charge you for password sharing? Let us know in the comments.

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Here’s what’s new on Disney+ Canada in April 2022

Disney has confirmed the full lineup of movies and shows hitting Disney+ Canada in April.

While it’s a light month for new original content, some of the older titles joining the catalogue include Scandal, a few seasons of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia and Prison Break.

April 1st

  • Better Nate Than Ever [Disney+ Original]
  • Books of Blood [Star]

April 6th

  • Anita: Director’s Cut [Star]
  • City of Angels/City of Death (Season 1) [Star]
  • The Hardy Boys (Season 1) [Star]
  • Homeland (Season 7) [Star]
  • Private Practice (Seasons 1-6) [Star]
  • Scandal (Seasons 1-7) [Star]
  • Terapia Alternativa [Star]

April 8th

  • The Housewife & the Shah Shocker [Star]
  • The Sinfluencer of Soho [Star]
  • Trust (Season 1) [Star]

April 13th

  • It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia (Seasons 10-13) [Star]
  • The Ignorant Angels (Season 1) [Star]
  • Last Man Standing (Season 9) [Star]
  • Scrat Tales [Disney+ Original]
  • Single Drunk Female (Season 1) [Star]

April 14th

  • The Kardashians [Disney+ Star Original]

April 15th

  • Hysterical [Star]
  • She’s The One [Star]
  • Stuck on You [Star]

April 20th

  • The Amazing Race (Seasons 30-32) [Star]

April 21st

  • Captive Audience (Season 1) [Star]

April 22nd

  • Bear Witness
  • The Biggest Little Farm: The Return [Disney+ Original]
  • Dr. K’s Exotic Animal ER (Season 9)
  • Dr. Oakley, Yukon Vet (Season 9)
  • Explorer: The Last Tepui [Disney+ Original]
  • The Incredible Dr. Pol (Season 18)
  • Polar Bear [Disney+ Original]

April 27th

  • Brain Games: On the Road (Season 1)
  • Code Black (Seasons 1-3) [Star]
  • Eye Wonder (Season 1) [Shorts]
  • Godfather of Harlem (Season 2) [Star]
  • NYPD Blue (Seasons 1-12) [Star]
  • Prison Break (Seasons 1-4) [Star]
  • Sketchbook [Disney+ Original]

April 29th

  • Crush [Star]
  • The Guardian [Star]
  • Kiss of the Dragon [Star]
  • Out of the Shadows: The Man Behind the Steele Dossier [Star]

A Disney+ subscription costs $11.99 CAD/month or $119.99/year.

Find out what came to Disney+ Canada last month here.

Image credit: Disney

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Spotify adds COVID disclosures to podcast and other content

Spotify is rolling out a COVID advisory tab on podcasts and other content whenever it mentions the coronavirus, according to CNBC. The music streaming app will show a blue tab that will direct users to a COVID-19 page to provide helpful information about the virus.

This comes after Spotify aired an episode of “The Joe Rogan Experience,” which spread misinformation about COVID-19. After a boycott due to this podcast, Spotify promised that it would add misinformation tags and a COVID information page. Two months later, the feature has finally come to fruition.

Spotify adding this feature is crucial. The streaming music platform bought the exclusive rights to the Joe Rogan podcast in 2020 in a deal worth more than $100 million USD (roughly $127 million CAD).

Following the acquisition, Rogan and Spotify have come under fire several times related to the spread of COVID-19-related misinformation on the show. Earlier this year, more than 270 doctors and other health care experts signed a joint letter condemning Spotify and Rogan for the COVID misinformation shared on the podcast.

Source: CNBC
Categories
Mobile Syrup

Crunchyroll ends free ad-supported viewing on new and continuing series

Crunchyroll, an anime streaming service now owned by Sony, has removed ad-supported viewing on new and continuing series. Viewers who want to stay up to date with the latest anime will have to upgrade to one of Crunchyroll’s premium plans.

Previously, users didn’t need to have a subscription to watch new episodes of simulcast titles, but Crunchyroll would delay the release of these new episodes by one week, while premium subscribers could watch them an hour after they release in Japan.

You’ll still be able to watch cancelled anime free — with ads, of course.

The anime streaming platform will offer some seasonal samplers for Spring 2022. Users will be able to watch the first three episodes of these simulcast titles for free:

  • Spy x Family
  • A Couple of Cuckoos
  • Dawn of the Witch
  • Tomodachi Game
  • Skeleton Knight in Another World
  • Shikimori’s Not Just a Cutie
  • The Greatest Demon Lord is Reborn as a Typical Nobody
  • Trapped in a Dating Sim: The World of Otome Games is Tough for Mobs

Three episodes of the above series will be available for free with ad-supporting viewing one week after their Japanese release date until May 31st. After that date, you’ll need to have a subscription to watch new episodes of these series.

It’s unclear if Crunchyroll will always offer seasonal samplers.

In Canada, premium Crunchyroll access starts at $7.99 CAD.

Sony also owns the anime streaming service Funimation. Recently, Crunchyroll announced that it will be taking over Funimation’s anime library, to slowly merge both platforms.

Image credit: Wit Studio/CloverWorks

Source: Crunchyroll

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Where to watch the 2022 Oscars in Canada

Following last year’s scaled-back ceremony, the Academy Awards are coming back in full force in 2022.

Taking place on March 27th at 8pm ET at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, the 94th Academy Awards will, for the first time since 2018, feature a host. Three, in fact — Amy Schumer, Regina Hall and Wanda Sykes.

How to watch

In Canada, Bell once again holds the exclusive rights to the Oscars, so the show will air on the media giant’s CTV network. This includes CTV’s channel on TV for cable subscribers, and streaming online for free on CTV.ca and the CTV app on Android and iOS.

Leading up to the main event at 8pm ET, Bell’s eTalk entertainment show will also have special Oscars coverage on TV, CTV.ca and in the CTV app. This includes “eTalk Previews the Oscars 2022” at 5:30pm ET (featuring interviews with Canadian director Denis Villeneuve, Andrew Garfield and more) and red carpet coverage from 6:30pm until the show begins.

What’s nominated

For context, here are the 10 films up for Best Picture:

  • Belfast — Laura Berwick, Kenneth Branagh, Becca Kovacik and Tamar Thomas
  • CODA — Philippe Rousselet, Fabrice Gianfermi and Patrick Wachsberger
  • Don’t Look Up — Adam McKay and Kevin Messick
  • Drive My Car — Teruhisa Yamamoto
  • Dune — Mary Parent, Denis Villeneuve and Cale Boyter
  • King Richard — Tim White, Trevor White and Will Smith
  • Licorice Pizza — Sara Murphy, Adam Somner and Paul Thomas Anderson
  • Nightmare Alley — Guillermo del Toro, J. Miles Dale and Bradley Cooper
  • The Power of the Dog — Jane Campion, Tanya Seghatchian, Emile Sherman, Iain Canning and Roger Frappier
  • West Side Story — Steven Spielberg and Kristie Macosko Krieger

It’s worth noting that of those films, Don’t Look Up and The Power of the Dog come from Netflix, while CODA is an Apple TV+ title. On top of that, many industry experts are predicting that the Best Picture race is down to CODA and The Power of the Dog. Assuming that pans out, this would mean that, for the first time ever, a streaming film would take home the Oscars’ top prize. Many are giving the edge to CODA for its emotional story about a young girl and her deaf family, which would mean that Apple — a company best known for making technology like the iPhone — could add “Best Picture Winner” to its legacy.

Outside of that, special mention should go to some of the Canadian nominees, which include:

  • Denis Villeneuve — the Quebec-born director and producer of Dune
  • J. Miles Dale — Toronto-born producer of Nightmare Alley (which was also filmed in Ontario)
  • Ben Proudfoot — Halifax-born filmmaker of The Queen of Basketball (nominated for Best Documentary Short)

A more in-depth breakdown of the Canadian nominees can be found over on The Hollywood Reporter.

The full list of 2022 Oscar nominees can be found here.

Who’s presenting

Of course, Oscar viewers like to see big-name stars during the show, even those who aren’t nominated. With that in mind, some of the confirmed presenters are Mississauga’s Simu Liu, Pickering, Ontario’s Shawn Mendes, Halifax’s Elliot Page, Bill Murray, Rami Malek, D.J. Khaled, Tony Hawk, Venus and Serena Williams and, after a brief fan outcry, Rachel Zegler.

Confirmed performances, meanwhile, include Beyoncé (the Oscar-nominated “Be Alive,” which she co-wrote with Dixson) and Billie Eilish and brother Finneas (their Oscar-nominated “No Time to Die”).

The full list of those taking the stage can be found here.

Anything else

It’s worth noting that the Academy has made the highly controversial decision to present eight awards — documentary short, film editing, makeup/hairstyling, original score, production design, animated short, live-action short and sound — prior to the live telecast and then edit them into the main show. Naturally, many noted that this was disrespectful to these nominees, as it implicitly suggests their work is “inferior” to those who made it into the actual telecast. Facing pressure from Disney-owned ABC to improve ever-dwindling ratings, the Academy says it made this decision to “allow more time for comedy, film clips and musical numbers.”


That covers pretty much everything. Ahead of the show, you can check out our roundup of where to stream many of the nominees in Canada, including all of the Best Picture nominees.

Which movies and creators do you hope will take home awards on March 27th? Let us know in the comments.

Image credit: Apple

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Here’s what’s new on Crave in April 2022

Bell has announced all of the new movies and shows coming to its Crave video streaming platform in April.

Series and movies like Season 2 of The Flight Attendant, Halloween Kills, the third season of HBO’s A Black Lady Sketch Show, Season 3 of Barry, The First Lady starring Viola Davis as Michelle Obama, and the Canadian movie Night Raiders.

Below is all the content coming to Crave in April 2022:

April 1st

  • 61 — HBO + Movies 
  • Jerrod Carmichael Stand UP Special — HBO + Movies 
  • Night Raiders — HBO + Movies 
  • Soccer Mom Madam — HBO + Movies
  • The Dark Knight — HBO + Movies
  • The Dark Knight Rises — HBO + Movies 
  • The Forever Purge — HBO + Movies 
  • Fairview: Season 1
  • Mary Makes it Easy: Season 1B
  • Chicago — Starz 
  • Drive — Starz
  • Lazy Susan @11pm ET — Starz 
  • My Best Friend’s Girl — Starz 
  • Speed Racer — Starz
  • Suffragette — Starz
  • Thor: Tales of Asgard — Starz 
  • The Winning Season — Starz

April 2nd

  • Kid-E-Cats: Season 1, Episodes 33-52
  • Super 4: Episodes 41-52
  • That’s Joey: Episodes 33-52
  • Zak Storm: Season 1, Episodes 11-29

April 4th

  • The Invisible Pilot: Season 1 @9pm ET — HBO + Movies 

April 5th

  • Tony Hawk: Until the Wheels Fall Off @9pm ET — HBO + Movies 

April 6th

  • Transplant: Season 2
  • Barney’s Version — Starz 

April 7th

  • Tokyo Vice: Episodes 1-3 — HBO + Movies

April 8th

  • A Black Lady Sketch Show: Season 3, Episode 1 @11pm ET — HBO + Movies 
  • Midway — HBO + Movies
  • Highway Thru Hell: Season 10 — HBO + Movies 
  • Last of the Giants: Season 1 — HBO + Movies 
  • Hope Floats — Starz
  • Miss Firecracker — Starz
  • Moulin Rouge — Starz
  • Never Let Me Go — Starz
  • Osmosis Jones — Starz 
  • Inherent Vice — Starz
  • Ride Along 2 — Starz
  • Wall Street — Starz
  • Wall Steet: Money Never Sleeps — Starz

April 9th

  • Appolo’s Tall Tales: Episodes 33-52

April 15th

  • Halloween Kills — HBO + Movies 
  • Needle In A Time Stack — HBO + Movies 
  • The Good Father: The Martin Macneill Story — HBO + Movies 
  • La Madrina: The Savage Life of Lorine Padilla
  • Cookie Monster’s Foodie Truck
  • Elmo’s World
  • Paul Rabliauskas: Uncle
  • Supermarket Sweep: Season 2
  • Wellington Paranormal
  • Up Dish: Season 1
  • A Stork’s Journey — Starz
  • Goodbye Christopher Robin — Starz 
  • Sharktopus — Starz
  • Sharktopus Vs. Pteracuda — Starz
  • Sharktopus Vs. Whalewolf — Starz
  • Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants — Starz
  • Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants 2 — Starz
  • The Secret Life of Walter Mitty — Starz
  • Walk The Line — Starz 
  • Whip It — Starz 

April 17th

  • The First Lady

April 20th

  • Portraits From A Fire — HBO + Movies 
  • Cypress Hill: Insane In The Brain
  • The Day We Left

April 21st

  • The Flight Attendant: Season 2, Episodes 1-3 — HBO + Movies

April 22nd

  • Living The Dream: Season 2C
  • Heavy Rescue 401: Season 6
  • A Hidden Life — Starz
  • Focus — Starz
  • Lucy in the Sky — Starz 
  • M*A*S*H — Starz 
  • Shark Tale — Starz 
  • The Beach — Starz 
  • The Visit — Starz
  • Thirteen — Starz 
  • Creation Stories — HBO + Movies
  • Torn From Her Arms — HBO + Movies 

April 23rd

  • Percy’s Tiger Tales Specials

April 24th

  • Gaslit — Starz 
  • Barry: Season 3 @10pm ET — HBO + Movies
  • The Baby @10:30pm ET — HBO + Movies 
  • The Man Who Fell From Earth: Episode 1

April 25th

  • We Own This City: Episode 1 @9pm ET — HBO + Movies 
  • Gentleman Jack: Season 2 @10pm ET — HBO + Movies 

April 27th

  • The Survivor @8pm ET — HBO + Movies 

April 29th

  • I Love That For You: Season 1, Episode 1
  • Mud Mountain Haulers: Season 1
  • Dead Ringers — Starz 
  • Donnie Darko — Starz 
  • Lost in Translation — Starz
  • Liar Liar — Starz 
  • Machete — Starz 
  • Miller’s Crossing — Starz 
  • New Order — HBO + Movies
  • The Humans — HBO + Movies 
  • This is the Night — HBO + Movies 
  • Bushwick Bill: Geto Boy

April 30th

  • Blippi Wonders: Episodes 1-3

Last Call

  • Life’s Too Short: Season 1 (April 7th)
  • Think Like A Dog (April 8th)
  • Planet of the Humans (April 12th)
  • Random Acts of Violence (April 14th)
  • Rogue Earth (April 14th)
  • American Woman (April 16th)
  • Supermarket Sweep: Season 1 (April 17th)
  • Anthropocene: The Human Epoch (April 19th)
  • ETalk: A BEll Let’s Talk Day Special (April 25th)
  • 2019 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (April 25th)
  • Viena and the Fantomes (April 29th)
  • 1917 (April 30th)
  • 3:10 To Yuma (April 30th)
  • A Very Harold & Kumar Christmas (April 30th)
  • Afghan Luke (April 30th)
  • American Psycho (April 30th)
  • Aquamarine (April 30th)
  • Beautiful Creatures (April 30th)
  • Blood Quantum (April 30th)
  • Can You Keep A Secret? (April 30th)
  • Crank (April 30th)
  • Crank 2: High Voltage (April 30th)
  • Dolittle (April 30th)
  • East of Eden (April 30th)
  • Enchantimals: Spring into Harvest Hills (April 30th)
  • Enchantimals: Tales From the Everwilde: Season 1 (April 30th)
  • Enemy (April 30th)
  • Four Kids and It (April 30th)
  • Gabrielle (April 30th)
  • Hall Pass (April 30th)
  • J. Edgar (April 30th)
  • Man Down (April 30th)
  • One Survivor Remembers (April 30th)
  • Parental Guidance (April 30th)
  • Punisher: War Zone (April 30th)
  • Ride Like A Girl (April 30th)
  • Sexy Beast (April 30th)
  • The Firm (April 30th)
  • The Hangover Part II (April 30th)
  • The Hunt (April 30th)
  • The Hurt Locker (April 30th)
  • The Ides of March (April 30th)
  • The Iron Lady (April 30th)
  • The Mechanic (April 30th)
  • The Wolfman (April 30th)
  • Things I Do For Money (April 30th)
  • W. (April 30th)
  • Zero Dark Thirty (April 30th)
Categories
Mobile Syrup

The Godfather trilogy is now available in 4K Ultra HD

In celebration of the first film’s 50th anniversary, The Godfather trilogy is now remastered and available in 4K Ultra HD.

You can grab the trilogy in 4K on Apple TV for $29.99. On Google Play, you’ll need to buy the movies individually, which cost $12.99 each in 4K. The physical Blu-ray trilogy costs $93.99 at Best Buy. 

The Godfather is Francis Ford Coppolla’s American crime series of movies, which ran from 1972-1990.

The film stars Marlon Brandon, Al Pacino, Diane Keaton, James Caan and more.

Image credit: @godfathermovie

Categories
Mobile Syrup

Netflix could earn $1.6 billion annually by charging for password sharing: analysts

Earlier this month, Netflix made headlines for announcing the upcoming testing of a paywall on password sharing in Chile, Costa Rica and Peru.

While the company has since told MobileSyrup it has no plans to expand this test to Canada, consumers have nonetheless been wary.

Now, a group of analysts has worked out a rough figure for potential revenue should Netflix introduce paid password sharing worldwide. According to U.S. analysts Cowen & Co., Netflix could bring in an additional $1.6 billion USD (about $2.01 billion CAD) globally each year.

For context, Cowen & Co.’s estimate would be about four percent of the company’s projected $38.8 billion USD (about $48.8 billion CAD) revenue for 2023.

How the firm came to this conclusion was that it assumed password sharing — which includes two extra accounts — would cost around $3 USD (about $3.77 CAD), which is what it’s set to charge during the test in the aforementioned countries. From there, Cowen & Co. projects that about half of non-paying Netflix password sharing households would become paying members, and half of that group would opt to sign up for their own accounts.

However, other analysts were skeptical Netflix would make that much off of paid password sharing. Per Deadline, Benchmark Co. analyst Matthew Harrigan said he expects that revenue would be less than that four percent, arguing that it “cannibalizes full-ride member growth.” In either case, both projections should naturally be taken with a grain of salt.

For now, it remains to be seen what Netflix will do following these international tests. It should be noted, though, that Netflix acknowledged the loss of potential revenue from password sharing in its original blog post announcing the test:

“We’ve always made it easy for people who live together to share their Netflix account, with features like separate profiles and multiple streams in our Standard and Premium plans. While these have been hugely popular, they have also created some confusion about when and how Netflix can be shared. As a result, accounts are being shared between households – impacting our ability to invest in great new TV and films for our members.”

The company also added that password sharing violates its terms of service, although it hasn’t ever prevented people from doing so.

Regardless, the news has not been well-received, especially as the streamer has increased prices in Canada twice within two years. The popular Twitter account ‘Poorly Aged Things’ even posted a screenshot of a 2017 tweet from Netflix’s main account that “Love is sharing a password.”

Many people have since responded to Netflix’s original tweet to express their frustration with the planned password sharing paywall test.

Via: Variety