Skip to main content

I was ready to cancel Disney+ — then they went and pulled this

After looking at all of my entertainment subscriptions in October, I had come to the painful conclusion that Disney+ was going to have to be cut loose. “I’ll just wait until this season of The Mandalorian is done,” I announced to my family, “and then I’m canceling Disney+.” I was fully expecting some pushback, especially from my two teenage children, but my decision was met with an uncharacteristic shrug of the shoulders, and so Disney+ was slated for cancellation. I had already moved us from annual to monthly billing in anticipation of hitting the cancel button.

Then, without any warning, Disney announced so many new shows and movies at a shareholder event that it should have been dubbed DisneyCon. Over the next three years, Disney plans no less than 10 new Marvel series, 10 new Star Wars series, and 15 shows from Pixar and its Disney animation and Disney live-action units. And that doesn’t include any of the Marvel and Star Wars movies, some of which, like Black Widow, will get a theatrical run before heading to the streaming service. Or the many series already set to debut on Disney+, like The Falcon and The Winter Soldier , which just dropped its first official trailer.

Recommended Videos

It’s all coming (eventually) to Disney+. And now I find myself in a quandary.

Interest wanes

See, even though my job clearly requires me to be on top of as many streaming services and devices as I can, there’s still a limit to how much money I’m prepared to pay every month. And I pay a lot. Netflix Premium, Amazon Prime Video, a full cable package including premium movie channels, a service called Crave that we Canadians are forced to buy if we ever want to watch HBO content (long story). I also pay for a family music streaming service. And, as of a year ago, Disney+ got added to the mix.

Like millions of others, I had a blast revisiting so many favorites from the Star Wars saga — many of which I got to see in 4K, Dolby Vision, and Dolby Atmos for the first time. Our 2019 Christmas time off was spent happily rewatching all of the Iron Man and Avengers movies, as well as classic Pixar fare like Toy Story and A Bug’s Life. When The Mandalorian debuted, we happily consumed that, too, and looked forward to the second season, which is still underway.

But once we had had our fill of Star Wars, Marvel, and Pixar nostalgia, we lost interest in Disney+. Not that the service wasn’t trying. Every week, Disney+ added new content, but most of it just wasn’t as interesting to us as what we were finding on Netflix and Amazon Prime Video. Really great series like The Crown, Peaky Blinders, The Expanse, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, or Fleabag were just so compelling that no amount of Disney love could tear us away once we started down those binge-worthy paths.

Price hike

Losing access to Marvel and Star Wars movies would sting a bit, for sure, but I figured if I ever missed them that much, I would simply sign up again. The news of an upcoming price increase only makes it easier to cancel. So, goodbye for now, Disney+!

But then Disney dropped the mother of all content announcements, and I still haven’t entirely recovered. Granted, the bulk of the shows that are interesting to our family won’t hit until mid-2021, but Disney is a shrewd company. There’s just enough content between now and then, like WandaVision, to make me reconsider my post-Mandalorian plans.

I suspect that even with the promised onslaught of new shows from Disney, Marvel, Star Wars, and more, we’ll still spend more time with our other streaming options. But Disney+ has just earned itself a temporary stay of execution, and possibly a permanent home.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen is a contributing editor to Digital Trends' Audio/Video section, where he obsesses over the latest wireless…
One year ago, Andor changed Star Wars forever
Cassian Andor looks forward with purpose in Andor episode 3.

When Andor premiered one year ago this week, the general response to its first three episodes, which all dropped on Disney+ at the same time, was … interesting. While everyone seemed to welcome the Rogue One prequel with open arms and positive reviews, some were quick to express their concerns over the show’s pace. On the one hand, it’s not hard to see why. Andor's first three installments essentially serve as both the series' inciting incident and its prologue.

The show’s opening chapters split their time between flashbacks to Cassian Andor’s (Diego Luna) traumatic childhood on the war-torn planet of Kenari and the present-day fallout of his impulsive decision to kill a pair of Imperial-adjacent officials. It isn’t until the end of Andor’s third episode that his backstory has been fully fleshed out and he’s actually left his adoptive planet of Ferrix with Luthen Rael (Stellan Skarsgård), the rebel leader who will jumpstart Cassian’s own radicalization. On paper, that might make it seem very little happens across Andor’s first three episodes.

Read more
Did Andor ruin Ahsoka, and maybe the entire Star Wars franchise, by being too good?
Ahsoka Tano holds one of her lightsabers in Ahsoka episode 4.

Disney+’s Ahsoka is a lot of things: A quasi-sequel to Star Wars Rebels, a spinoff of The Mandalorian, a rollicking space adventure. Above all else, though, Ahsoka is a show made by and for Star Wars fans. Created by George Lucas’ chosen protégé, Dave Filoni, the series is overflowing with details, Easter eggs, and characters from past Star Wars films and TV shows — namely, Star Wars: The Clone Wars and Rebels. These various references have all been collected in a story that seems designed to serve as the bridge between the Rebels finale and Filoni’s now-announced Star Wars crossover film, which will purportedly close out the New Republic story first introduced in The Mandalorian.

At the center of said story is the villainous Grand Admiral Thrawn (Lars Mikkelsen) and the Imperial Remnant’s quest to bring him back into the fold. That mission is the driving narrative force of Ahsoka, which pits the show’s heroes against those who wish to find Thrawn and rescue him from his years-long exile in a foreign galaxy. The series is, in other words, a lot less about Ahsoka Tano (Rosario Dawson) and her personal journey than its title would lead you to believe. In fact, of all of its concerns, Ahsoka’s characters feel increasingly less like its top priority.

Read more
Disney shifts release dates for Marvel movies, Star Wars films, and Avatar sequels
Wade with his hands over his mouth

The writers' strike has lasted about one-and-a-half months so far, and it doesn't appear to be ending anytime soon. And now, Disney is making some major schedule changes to almost all of its upcoming franchise films. Avatar fans are going to feel it the most. Avatar 3 has been pushed back a year from December 2024 to December 19, 2025. The other sequels, Avatar 4 and Avatar 5, have been delayed to December 21, 2029, and December 19, 2031, respectively. That's a three-year delay for both titles from their previous release dates.

Marvel's 2024 slate is also getting a big shake-up, with Captain America: Brave New World moving away from its summer opening slot on May 3, 2024, to July 26, 2024. The Thunderbolts movie is shifting from July 26, 2024, to December 20, 2024, the former release date for Avatar 3. That will make it only the second MCU movie to be released in December after Spider-Man: No Way Home.

Read more