Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Movies The Internet Businesses Network Software Television Wireless Networking News Entertainment Technology

Netflix Now Only Has 31 Movies From IMDB's Top 250 List (streamingobserver.com) 181

According to Streaming Observer News, the quality and quantity of Netflix's movie library has declined over the last two years when cross-referenced with IMDB's Top 250 movies list. From the report: Well, it's a pretty common fact at this point that Netflix's library is shrinking. Of course, what Netflix needs to do as it shrinks its licensed movie library is make sure that movies it does have are good ones. But according to our analysis, it's going backwards, unfortunately. A while back we noticed a post from this Reddit member who, two years ago, cross-referenced the IMDB (Internet Movie Database) top 250 movies list with Netflix's movie library to find out how many of the top movies Netflix carried. When u/clayton_frisbie posted his list on Reddit, Netflix had 49 of the Top 250 movies on the IMDB list. That's just under 20 percent, which isn't terrible. But we wondered how that number has held up over the last two years in the face of a quickly shrinking library. So we reran the analysis. How many of the top 250 movies does Netflix now have? As of September 2016, that number has dropped to 31, or about 12 percent. [You can view the list via Streaming Observer News.]
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Netflix Now Only Has 31 Movies From IMDB's Top 250 List

Comments Filter:
  • You gotta spend money to make money.

    Paying for licenses is expensive, but if you can make money doing it then of course you would. So either Netflix is making a terrible mistake, or there is a difficulty in turning a profit with these license costs in an all-you-can-eat sort of plan that Netflix offers its customers.

    • by tripleevenfall ( 1990004 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:35PM (#53065117)

      Or there is not a difficulty in turning a profit without paying the license costs, so they don't pay them.

      • by michelcolman ( 1208008 ) on Thursday October 13, 2016 @03:43AM (#53068015)

        So, I want to see a particular movie tonight, let's see, it's not on Netflix... iTunes will only sell it but not rent it... what other services are there... ah, found it, Bittorrent.

        Why does the MPAA keep trying so hard to push us into piracy? Jeez, I actually switched from being a pirate to wanting to rent movies fair and square, and then I get all this "not available in your area" bullshit. OK, you got your chance, bye!

    • by PRMan ( 959735 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:52PM (#53065241)

      Or maybe Netflix's algorithms show that we've all seen these movies already and don't watch them again. I mean, Amelie and Inception were interesting, but I would never watch them again.

      • by cayenne8 ( 626475 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @05:01PM (#53065311) Homepage Journal
        For most newer movies or deeper movies...I still have my Netflix DVD/BluRay subscription...and you have a wider choice of titles there....
      • by alphatel ( 1450715 ) * on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @05:14PM (#53065403)
        There's also the fact that IMDB's top 250 simply ain't what it used to be. I mean seriously... Deadpool? Zootopia?
        • by KingMotley ( 944240 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @05:56PM (#53065695) Journal

          I agree. There is no way deadpool should be at 234. It is easily a top 50.

        • You are partially right. But top 250 has... 250 movies. Some of those have been there for a couple decades if not more. Those are very good movies, almost none of which are in Netflix's list.

          (nice Snowpiercer quote BTW)

        • Have you seen Zootopia?

          It was great, as an over 40 adult. The sloth's running the DMV was genius and makes the entire movie worth a watch.

          Deadpool would probably make my top 250 as well, but I wouldn't ever make such an exhaustive list.

          • The sloth's running the DMV was genius and makes the entire movie worth a watch.

            That bit had me in stitches! I HAVE BEEN THERE!

            I think only me and my partner were the only people laughing at that bit. We're in the UK and so don't have the DMV, we have the DVLA in Wales which you interact with via the common remote means, so the joke just didn't strike as true.

          • A number of the jokes were funny but not unsurprising (like the sloth dmv).

            I found the movie to be an interesting commentary on government corruption and its use of fear to oppress a minority group for its own means.

          • The sloth showing up at the end was pretty funny too. I don't want to give spoilers, so won't describe the situation.

        • There's also the fact that IMDB's top 250 simply ain't what it used to be. I mean seriously... Deadpool? Zootopia?

          I'm going to hazard a guess that you aren't a parent to a kid under 8. I can no longer keep track how many times I've seen Zootopia, but its certainly more often than I've seen Inception.

        • by Rakarra ( 112805 )

          I'm not sure about Deadpool, but Zootopia absolutely deserves its spot, yet.

      • Or maybe Netflix's algorithms show that we've all seen these movies already and don't watch them again.

        I've seen every top 250 movie that I care to see, save maybe a few very recent ones. So I'm glad I'm not paying NF to stock movies I won't watch. Give me new material or give me bacon!

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by David_Hart ( 1184661 )

      This is exactly why I dropped Netflix 5 years ago. It was obvious then that they weren't going to spend the money to maintain their current movie collection and I am a big movie fan. I couldn't care less about TV series.

      The few TV series that I do like I watch on TV/DVR since I have to pay for the movie channels. Amazon Prime is slowly getting there. But they haven't gotten to the point where their library is big enough.

      • I would say there are more people interested in an ever-changing movie database so they can watch movies they haven't seen or movies they haven't seen in a long time, as opposed to your preference that Netflix simply "maintain their current movie collection". They only have finite money, and they learned the very hard way what happens when they increase their rates. So the only choice is to rotate movies and TV shows in and out of their collection.

        • yes they have learned that by increasing their rates they make more money. That's why they just raised them again recently.

        • by mwvdlee ( 775178 )

          I dare bet most people would be interrested in an ever-growing movie database. Ever-changing is something they settle with as a second-best solution. What they're actually getting is ever-cheaper with expensive movies being replaced with cheaper movies. The reality is that the IMDB Top 250 is mostly movies popular with movie buffs; a relatively small group. They don't include many of the movies that are popular with a larger crowd. Guess which type of customers Netflix would prefer; a small group of highly

          • by gfxguy ( 98788 )
            While we find some content perusing the older movies on IMDB, I'd prefer to see more recent movies - not necessarily top 250. Shawshank and the Godfather are awesome movies, no doubt - I've seen each one at least 10 times. I want Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu (which does carry movies, too) to get some more recent movies that I haven't seen in theaters because I don't go that often.
        • by gfxguy ( 98788 )
          I've only recently begun to watch their originals, and while they're quite good, what I really want in Netflix is catching the movies I was interested but didn't catch in the theaters. Between Hulu, Amazon Prime, and Netflix, you get maybe 3 recent popular movies a year that I haven't seen in theaters, and they aren't the blockbusters. I want these services, in part, because I don't want to see things in theaters anymore, and I don't pirate content. It's still more worthwhile to pay the Amazon rental fee
    • by DrXym ( 126579 )
      I doubt Netflix pays more than a few cents when someone streams a back catalogue movie. If Netflix isn't showing them it's probably because they haven't got an ongoing arrangement with the rights holder.
    • You gotta spend money to make money.

      Paying for licenses is expensive, but if you can make money doing it then of course you would. So either Netflix is making a terrible mistake, or there is a difficulty in turning a profit with these license costs in an all-you-can-eat sort of plan that Netflix offers its customers.

      Or the license holders simply aren't allowing movies to be licensed for streaming because their math shows it they would lose money by those movies distracting people from other movies they are letting stream. Could also be that the legal stuff isn't there to allow for streaming, especially for older movies. Hell, there are a lot of movies that made it to VHS but not DVD because the legal stuff isn't there, let alone streaming.

  • by nitehawk214 ( 222219 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:16PM (#53064943)

    Their plan is become original series only. And then they can entirely drop the catalog of movies and shows.

    It protects them from getting pinched by sites that have deals with content producers.

    However, are people going to be willing to pay Netflix's fees for just the new series?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:23PM (#53065007) Homepage Journal

      The original series are the reason I subscribe, the other stuff is just an added bonus.

      • by Moheeheeko ( 1682914 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:39PM (#53065163)
        Agreed. The quality of the original shows they make is well in the top 3 for networks.
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        I find their "original" stuff mediocre at best. The licensed movies and TV shows were the *only* reason we subscribed to Netflix streaming in the first place.

        I'm just waiting for my wife to finish a couple BBC murder mysteries that are still on Netflix... then I'm pulling the streaming plug (will keep the DVD subscription, though - at least for now). Dumb thing is - these all aired on PBS's "Masterpiece", but PBS doesn't seem to include most of their more popular shows in their app (and yes, we still have a

        • by lucm ( 889690 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @07:52PM (#53066341)

          I hope you'lll find something nice to do with that $8/month you're going to save once your wife is done watching 17 seasons of Midsomer Murders. Maybe treat yourself to a nice latte and cupcake?

          • Eight dollars here, ten dollars there... eventually it adds up to real money. There's no point in spending it if you aren't getting perceived value from it.

            If you're over 35, try a fun little exercise sometime and start adding up the little subscription costs you have now that you didn't have in the 1990s - or that have gone up horrendously since then (like cable TV or perhaps your cell phone bill).

            • Think about this for a minute:

              In 1977 may father paid $25 per month for a single line plus any long distance fees (average $45 per month with three teenager in the house) and no access to any on-line stuff because it did not exist. He also paid about .$0.45 per gallon of gas.

              Today I pay $150 per month for four phones with unlimited long distance and shared 15GB of data. I pay $2.50 for a gallon of gas. The phone has tripled while gas is five times as expensive.
              When compared to other items the price of ph

            • As a 36 year old, I would like to point out to you, I paid nothing in 1990, as I was 10 years old.

      • I have never watched a single "Netflix Original" show, and have no plans to start.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          I have never watched a single "Netflix Original" show, and have no plans to start.

          You're loss. They cover basically the entire spectrum of shows so there's something for everyone. Of course some people are just weird or stubborn or frankly, just trying to feel special. "I don't watch Netflix Orginals" is very rebellious of you. We're all quite impressed.

          • by Anonymous Coward

            He's loss?

            But seriously, their spectrum of shows isn't wide enough yet. Too much "real life" stuff, too much "fantasy" stuff, barely any sci-fiction stuff.

            They did completely nail the 80's feel and vibe with Stranger Things, though.

        • Fair enough. I've watched a whole load of them.

          I'm the type of customer they're trying to attract. TV shows are much lower risk, and much broader appeal. It's also the stuff that's getting talked about. House of Cards and Orange Is The New Black are shows that get a lot of media attention.
    • There are months, maybe years worth of TV shows and what not on there too that Netflix didn't make but probably don't cost a fortune in license fees. Plus Netflix has more, good, original content than say HBO. It's not doing too bad.

      Movies I can get via mail if I want them, but increasingly I don't.

    • It protects them from getting pinched by sites that have deals with content producers.

      Making deals with content providers is what I expect from a streaming service!

    • If that's their plan I hope it's a very long-term plan because although I think some of the original series are great I think some of them aren't and it's going to take a long time for them to build up a large enough catalog to be self-sufficient and by the time they do I'll have seen most of the ones I care to - if I haven't died of old age by then.

      • Every time I fire up Netflix these days I see more original content. It actually takes me a while to peruse the new titles to see if they interest me. They are being very aggressive in that regard it's simply that they are in the early stages so the library is still relatively small compared to a Paramount or WB. I mean they announced two years ago DareDevil [wikipedia.org] would be the first of five new Marvel titles. Jessica Jones followed and Luke Cage was released a couple of weeks back. Iron Fist is just around the co
        • by gfxguy ( 98788 )

          That's great if you like shows based on comics book heroes - while I will watch the occasional Marvel movie, I'm not invested enough to care about ongoing series. House of Cards and Orange is the New Black are not really my style. Narcos is quite good... My personal tastes aside, is what they are offering enough to justify the monthly fee. If you only like two or three of their shows, then it's more worthwhile to sign up for a couple of months and binge watch, then cancel because, as far as I recall, the

    • by Rakarra ( 112805 )

      Their plan is become original series only. And then they can entirely drop the catalog of movies and shows.

      So then, instead of being my go-to source for a library of content, they become just another AMC or HBO or Showtime or Starz. Just another TV channel, which is the last thing any of us wanted.

  • by Daemonik ( 171801 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:17PM (#53064951) Homepage

    People blame Netflix for this like it's something they want, which is untrue.

    Fact of the matter is that the studios that own the rights to these films won't sign with Netflix because it competes with the cable companies that own them both for on demand streaming and cable channels, as well as studio owned fronts like Hulu.

    This is what happens when content providers consolidate with the content delivery companies. Collusion, false monopolies and fixed markets.

    It's time for the government to step in and break up the cable/studio/isp's into their separate pieces again.

    • by H3lldr0p ( 40304 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:38PM (#53065143) Homepage

      In addition to the breakup, I'd like to see movies and television put under a compulsory licensing scheme after, say five years. Set up a similar system to how music royalties get collected and paid out. This way companies like YouTube and Netflix can stop worry about this and follow where the demand takes them. The five year buffer doesn't stop studios from cutting deals to get shows and movies out to platforms of choice earlier and gives them time to sell the physical media.

      • The five year buffer doesn't stop studios from cutting deals to get shows and movies out to platforms of choice earlier and gives them time to sell the physical media.

        So what? How does that benefit the public (which is the only valid purpose of copyright in the first place)?

        I see no reason not to do compulsory licensing without some arbitrary and capricious "buffer."

        • by H3lldr0p ( 40304 )

          It may not be popular right now, but compromise is how we get things done. In this case, the studios and big copyright get something in return for giving up their harebrained platform exclusivity. The ability to see how harebrained platform exclusivity is for a certain time before everybody fills their coffers.

      • or Stranger Things. Or any of the original shows that Netflix is creating to try and survive. It's tough to argue for compulsory licensing to improve competition when competition is resulting in more content. Not that I'm necessarily opposed to your idea, I just don't think it'll fly in the the face of what we're seeing.
    • by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:45PM (#53065201)

      Those studios are shooting themselves in the foot though. Who wants to have to deal with multiple accounts and hunt down the show they want to watch across Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, HBO Go/Now, CBS whatever, Vudu, Crackle, FXnow, and so and so on and so on? For many, Netflix is the first and only stop, and if what they want to watch isn't there, they wont scour the ends of the internet for it. They'll goto the one place they know it will be available: The Pirate Bay.

      • by H3lldr0p ( 40304 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:50PM (#53065231) Homepage

        I'll give the studios some credit in this. It would appear they looked at what happened with music and book publishers and decided they didn't want any one company lording over them and being able to cut deals like Amazon and Apple did. For them, it's a choice of either shooting their left foot and let Netflix have what they want at whatever price they can get or shoot their right foot by forcing people to have more than one account.

        Only time will show which one they shot.

      • That's what I do. I like older movies from the 1900's. I'd go on there and watch em. Eventually newer stuff got added. I'd watch them too. I unsubscribed because anything I'd search for was gone. Or they started the VPN witch hunt. Back to ye ol Pirate Bay
      • I've seen people hunt around for shows on Amazon and Hulu or whatever rather than trying to torrent. In fact I have a Roku and it has a built in cross-service search. The studios are not dumb. I wish there was compulsory licensing for movies and shows too, but the fact is, they are making bank on the current model.

  • by dbialac ( 320955 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:18PM (#53064965)

    I came to realize I was paying to watch one original series for a week a year, five seasons of Top Gear and Futurama. I could get everything else that I might watch elsewhere and more. It stopped being worth subscribing.

  • dvd.netflix.com (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kludge ( 13653 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:19PM (#53064973)

    I still have not subscribed to the streaming part of netflix.
    I still get the dvds.

    • The nice thing about the Bluray/DVD service is you can just rip the disk to your file server and send it back. Well, I mean, if you wanted to... Not that I would ever amass dozens of terabytes of ripped Blurays or anything... Never.

    • by suutar ( 1860506 )

      I get both, though the DVD catalog is wearing out over time and the stuff I'm interested in is niche enough to not get replaced promptly (or at all...) so at some point I will probably drop that side.

  • by JMZero ( 449047 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:20PM (#53064977) Homepage

    I'd much rather Netflix spends their money on TV shows (especially originals) than chasing expensive, popular movies. If I feel I need to watch The Dark Knight again (and I don't expect to) I'll find a way. No - I stay subscribed to them for TV: Stranger Things and House of Cards and Better Call Saul.

    Well, that and my kids have been into Digimon lately.

  • I usually watch foreign movies on Netflix. Most US made movies aren't worth watching anyway....
  • I have always liked the B to D grade stuff netflix streams. Even terrible sci-fi and horror films will often have at least one interesting idea. I like to just put them on in the background while i code or game or something. If they get interesting, i'm like, "yeah! score! hidden gem!", if they suck, it's no big deal. It feels like i'm getting this content for almost free.

    If a movie comes along that's so great it's going down as one of the best movies ever, I'll gladly buy a ticket for it. Then i've seen
  • by SeriousTube ( 2575581 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @04:48PM (#53065217)
    This is why I get their DVDs instead of streaming. I haven't made a count but they have a far higher percentage than that on DVD. I've gotten the impression they have 8 or 10 times as many movies on DVD as on streaming.
    • by indytx ( 825419 )

      This is why I get their DVDs instead of streaming. I haven't made a count but they have a far higher percentage than that on DVD. I've gotten the impression they have 8 or 10 times as many movies on DVD as on streaming.

      Netflix has almost EVERYTHING on DVD/BR.

  • I think what would matter is over say a 5 year period how many of them they have...

    That they have to balance old content vs. new content.... it is a real hard cost to license everything, always, forever.

    But knowing in any given 5 or 10 year period that most of the good stuff is rotating through.. would be enough for me.

    another approach is what percent of their customers want old content vs. newer, I like older but I watch about 95% new / 5% old...

  • I know you kids have seen them in your parent's closet. Little plastic round things? Netflix ships them out to the 23 customers still on the DVD plan. And yeah, what really sucks is they are starting to squeeze the DVD service also. No more Saturday processing. Fewer buys of obscure stuff. Even ignoring popular stuff (Want Heartland on DVD? Only one of Canada's most popular shows ever. Region 1 DVD's released. Not on Netflix).
  • New meaning to "Netflix and Chill(y)"?
  • by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @05:29PM (#53065501) Homepage

    Well, it's a pretty common fact at this point that Netflix's *streaming* library is shrinking.

  • Season two is in production.

    And their kids offerings are great (I watch Phineas and Ferb with and without the kids, it's very well written).

    Anyway, we binge watched the first season of Stranger Things and it was awesome (Goonies melded with ET melded with The Bodyguard melded with the Force from Star Wars - freaking incredible). And there's another dimension.

  • by PeeAitchPee ( 712652 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @05:39PM (#53065577)
    Just torrent from the green and pink skulls and you can be pretty sure you're not ending up with malware.
    • by Kohlrabi82 ( 1672654 ) on Wednesday October 12, 2016 @11:38PM (#53067363)

      Yeah, it's not only that Piratebay and friends obviously offer the bigger catalogue of content. It's also that you get a DRM-free version you can play anywhere, anytime without being online.

      Do sites like Netflix really expect to be paid for worse service? I'd still be willing to pay for a service (monthly, or per-content) if it allowed the ease of use and freedom of pirating sites. Not that I really use those, I essentially stopped watching TV shows and movies, except for one or two shows hosted via Amazon Prime, Netflix wasn't at all worth it because I only was interested in one or two shows, but since I don't binge-watch, finishing one might take months, which makes this service much more expensive than a box set of Blurays.

      But sadly Blurays are shit and insulting. I have to sit through minutes of shitty menus and anti-piracy shit, even though I paid €15 for a movie. I cannot play Bluray on my PC without buying some software for playback, like the now-defunct AnyDVD, or MakeMKV. I certainly won't buy a shitty special player software, which locks me in even further.

      Streaming sites are shit. Ever changing catalogues, small amount of content and the fact that sometimes they only offer half the seasons of a TV show (Amazon, I'm looking at you). Add to that that I am forced to be online. So it is unusable on business trips on the plane or in hotels with bad WiFi, a situation where I'm more likely to just watch a movie or show than at home. On top we have DRM playback software, which forces me to use Chrome.

      Offer me a way to get the content onto my PC DRM-free, without jumping through hoops, and we might have a deal.

  • When someone else controls the content, you end up as a "dumb pipe". The carriers don't like that (fuck them -- they should just become a public utilitty like the water) and Netflix had the same problem at layer 7. So instead they are burning capital making their own content. Good luck to them.

    I assume they made payoffs to the publishers to avoid this problem with DVDs. Redbox would't and famously had troubles.

  • The majority of their customers aren't watching Citizen Kane and other cinematic masterpieces. Far more want to binge watch the entire Fast and Furious series in between runs of Jackass. The top movies are generally already owned on DVD by the people who want to watch them, as few of them came out in the past 5-10 years (which is generally the period of time that Netflix focuses on).
  • Why 250? Why not top 50? Or top 10? Or top 500? Is 250 significant?

    • by Equuleus42 ( 723 )

      Good question. Based on a logarithmic fit curve of the IMDb Top 250 movies (with an R^2 of 0.97), it would appear that larger lists would still contain movies with relatively high ratings. Currently the lowest rating on the Top 250 list is 8.0. Extrapolating from the fit curve, here are some other possibilities:

      - a Top 500 list would have movies with a rating of >= ~7.8
      - a Top 1000 list would have movies with a rating of >= ~7.6
      - a Top 2000 list would have movies with a rating of >= ~7.5
      - a Top 100

  • That's consistent with my having dropped my subscription several months back. I had watched everything I wanted to watch that I could find on Netflix. And I couldn't rewatch some of it, because it had been pulled.
  • I've been torrenting for... idunno... YEARS. A couple of months ago, I bought a $30 Netflix gift card, signed up, and gave it a whirl. I installed a couple of Kodi plugins for Netflix. One didn't work at all, and the other worked for two weeks before Netflix changed something and broke it. I watched Stranger Things, but then couldn't really find anything else that interested me.

    So, now I've canceled my account and will continue to torrent for the foreseeable future. It doesn't ever break, and it has e
  • Movies should be licensed websites the same as music is licensed to radio. Anyone can play anything in the library, but you have to pay the royalty. That way Netflix, Hulu, Amazon would compete only on delivery and price, and they'd have an order of magnitude more content each. And we'd have a bunch of new competitors.

  • How can Netflix defend higher prices with less quality choices?

Every nonzero finite dimensional inner product space has an orthonormal basis. It makes sense, when you don't think about it.

Working...