Netflix Sows Confusion, Announces DVD Plan That Already Existed [VIDEO]
Netflix hasn’t been doing well communicating with its movie-loving customer base in the past six months (remember Qwikster?), and the company tripped up again this week.
Netflix hasn’t been doing well communicating with its movie-loving customer base in the past six months (remember Qwikster?), and the company tripped up again this week.
Three movies just released on Blu-ray, “Rock-a-Bye Baby,†“The Geisha Boy†and “Boeing, Boeing,†are an important chapter in the psychobiography that is Jerry Lewis’s career
For better or worse, little people have long been associated with show business. Possibly because of their natural ability to attract curiosity, they’ve been cast in circuses and films over the years, with stars ranging from General Tom Thumb of P.T
For better or worse, little people have long been associated with show business.
“Safe House,” starring Denzel Washington and Ryan Reynolds, is now playing in area theaters. Photo: Contributed Photo / Westport News contributed Like Dr.
Despite its commitment to streaming movies and TV, Netflix is offering its DVD-only service option to new customers again, but will it tempt those who have converted to Redbox?
Netflix has taken its DVD-only subscription plan out of the shadows, enabling customers to rent as many discs as they like starting at $7.99 a month.
RATING: (POLITE APPLAUSE) Mozart’s Sister A fictionalized account of a short span in the life of Maria Anna Mozart, Wolfgang’s older sibling, whose surpassing musical talent was discouraged because of her gender.
Netflix’s price increase last year rather infuriated some of their patrons. Many thought that the $16/month charge for both streaming and DVD rental was too much, and some even threatened to leave. But what angered them the most is the fact that … Continue reading → Netflix Reneges on DVD Rentals as Cable Ups the Ante is a post from: SiliconANGLE We’re now available on the Kindle! Subscribe …
Highly Recommended For this reviewer, watching Woody Allen’s Manhattan (1979) on Blu-ray was a curious viewing experience. I’d seen it when it was new, while I was in high school. And between 1979 and 1989 I must have watched it at least another 15 times, first in theaters and later in revival houses and on cable television beginning around 1984, where Manhattan may have been the first movie …
