Slide 1
I really don’t get this strategy. I already pay Disney+ for new content, and now they’re going to charge on top of it? I get how it’s cheaper for families than the theatre, but it’s still a greedy, crap idea.
— DomBob (@RobVanDom) August 4, 2020
Slide 2
30$ is just too much. If it were Black Widow, maybe, but even then it would probably be too much money
— Francesco Ricci (@iamnandissimo) August 4, 2020
Slide 3
That’s six bucks a person for my family of 5. ???? not a bad deal for a brand new movie. Good thing I have a huge tv.
— JayDub (@JayDubRan) August 4, 2020
Slide 4
After paying a monthly fee, I am not sinking more money into something like that, unless they ship a hard copy to me, as well
— Adam Driskell (@adam_driskell) August 5, 2020
Slide 5
Yes, my wife and daughter will@want to watch it and I want other studios to get on direct digital releases!
— Wes (@comicconster) August 5, 2020
Slide 6
Already paying for Disney+ here. I don’t think that price justifies the ‘rental’ of any new film. Considering we’ve just heard Disney have reached their projected numbers for the first 5 years already, this $30 rental charge is just pure greed imo
— Kel (@kelwinser) August 4, 2020
Slide 7
I wouldn’t rent Mulan, Black Widow however is a very different question…
— Andrew Deiker (@BatmanFanboy12) August 4, 2020
Slide 8
not disney trying to sell me a mushu-less, non-musical mulan for $30 on an app i already pay money for ? ? ? pic.twitter.com/KVfULM2vHI
— joe (@maloonds) August 4, 2020
Slide 9
Does Disney really think people are going to pay $30 to watch that Mulan remake without Mushu? pic.twitter.com/6ugwun9hhN
— ItsRyan (@MztrGaga) August 4, 2020
Slide 10
I’ll just buy 30$ worth of snacks and watch the 1998 #Mulan pic.twitter.com/ljqq5rLsCA
— Moosetifed (@Moosetifed) August 4, 2020
Tim M. Hill helped bring Digital-Overload from a weekly newsletter to a full-fledged news site by creating a new website and branding. He continues to assist in keeping the site responsive and well organized for the readers. As a writer to Digital-Overload, Tim mainly covers mobile news and gadgets.