"From learning about new movies to getting to the movies to the home entertainment experience, this gives us the chance to create a consistent, one-stop shop, high quality experience for the entire movie cycle," Fandango President Paul Yanover said.įandango purchased streaming service M-Go in January and plans to re-brand it later this year as part of its digital network. Fandango's acquisition doesn't include Flixster's video streaming service. Entertainment, the film studio owned by Time Warner, will remain a strategic partner and receive a minority stake in Fandango, the companies said Wednesday. Terms of the deal weren't disclosed. Rotten Tomatoes, whose "Tomatometer" has garnered the website a loyal following of over 20 million monthly visitors, aggregates movie reviews and review scores. Flixster, Rotten Tomatoes' sister website, allows users to share and discover new TV shows and movies, as well as rent or buy digital movies. ![]() Still, there’s nothing wrong with trying something big and ambitious.Ticket-selling service Fandango, owned by cable giant Comcast, is diversifying its online movie offerings after striking a deal to buy Flixster and Rotten Tomatoes from Warner Bros. Especially since Facebook and Twitter already do a pretty good job of letting you and your friends gab about movies - without the privacy worries of letting a service look into your Netflix queue or root around in your hard drive.Īnd again, since the service is really supposed to shine once you can start sharing your likes and dislikes with friends, getting enough folks to sign on might be a challenge. Sound like a lot of … stuff? It is! And the scope of the service’s offerings, plus the fact that it requires a standalone download (for Mac and PCs only for now, though mobile apps will be coming), may be a lot for casual video fans to take in. You can also imagine how this will tie in to “ Ultraviolet,” the cloud/locker system for video that Warner and a big coalition of movie studios and tech companies (except for Apple and Amazon) are pushing. It can also direct you back to those services when you want to watch something else.Īnd if you’d like to see a movie that’s actually in theaters, it can help there, too, via links to movie reviews, trailers and online ticketing services. And it lets you and your friends see what you’ve already watched, via “collections” that get displayed as movie posters (it doesn’t seem to have hang-ups about the “Bork law” that Netflix says prevents a Facebook integration the rental service wants to launch in the U.S.). ![]() The free service ties into users’ Amazon, Apple iTunes, Hulu and Netflix accounts - as well as your hard drive, if you let it. is trying to do here, and it’s a lot: They want Flixster to serve as your starting point whenever you’re thinking about renting, buying or watching a movie, or even when you’re thinking about thinking about it. That said, you can at least get a sense of what Warner Bros. Particularly since it’s supposed to be a social experience, and if no one you know is using it, it can’t be that social. ![]() I’ve given the service - which uses the Flixster brand that Warner Bros acquired earlier this year but which the studio built on its own over the last 12 months - a quick spin. Given that it just went into public beta yesterday, there’s no way to really assess how it’s going to work. Here’s one of his focal points: Flixster Collections, a social movie portal his Warner Bros. Time Warner CEO Jeff Bewkes spent a lot of yesterday’s earnings call discussing the company’s future in digital video.
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