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MoviePass offers refunds to users affected by service outage

On Friday night, July 6, some MoviePass users encountered a problem that prevented them from accessing the service. The company quickly confirmed that it was aware of the problem and said it would issue refunds to customers who paid for tickets out of pocket.


Unfortunately, the company’s solution failed to satisfy all of its customers. Frustrated users took to Twitter to complain about the issue and said that MoviePass’ reputation for poor customer service made it unlikely that any such refunds would be issued.

https://twitter.com/nofeenews/status/1015383520653348865

https://twitter.com/boxofstruggles/status/1015413085304184833

Regardless of how quickly the company handles the refunds, it still reflects poorly on MoviePass, which is facing a bit of an image problem due to recent changes in its service, including the use of peak pricing and conflicting statements on whether it would keep its popular one-movie-a-day model. Eventually, the company announced that the one-movie-a-day plan was here to stay.

Perhaps worst of all for MoviePass was the timing of this service outage. The incident occurred on the release day of Marvel’s Ant-Man and the Wasp, forcing some users to pay out of pocket for one of the summer’s most anticipated blockbusters. On Twitter, a handful of users questioned whether this outage was truly an accident. While there is no evidence to suggest that this was anything more than a case of bad luck, it does highlight MoviePass’ declining reputation among theatergoers.

Anyone find it funny that the weekend Ant-Man was released the app stated having issues & times for the movie in their app were incorrect or not listed at all?

— 'Short & Sweet' Film Reviews (@8_Sec_Film_Rev) July 7, 2018

the same thing happened the weekend Infinity War was released, it’s intentional.

— Daniel Weinman (@dweinman22) July 7, 2018

Despite these issues, MoviePass remains a popular option for many moviegoers and the company’s subscription model has even prompted AMC to roll out a similar, albeit more expensive, service to compete with MoviePass.

Eric Brackett
Former Digital Trends Contributor
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