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'Wonder Woman' to 'Suicide Squad': How to stream all the movies dropping on HBO and theaters at the same time

All 17 movies of Warner Bros scheduled to release in 2021 will be available to stream through HBO Max
PUBLISHED DEC 4, 2020
'Suicide Squad', 'Wonder Woman' (Warner Bros Pictures/YouTube)
'Suicide Squad', 'Wonder Woman' (Warner Bros Pictures/YouTube)

For cinephiles who love streaming movies rather than heading to a theater, the new decision made by Warner Bros in collaboration with HBO Max is the best to date. From 'Wonder Woman' to 'Suicide Squad', all major releases of Warner Bros will be now available for a limited time streaming when the movie premieres at theaters. 

The decision to premiere movies simultaneously on streaming sites and at theaters comes with the current Covid-19 situation in view, Warner media has stated. 'Wonder Woman' which releases on December 25 was already announced to be both in theaters and HBO Max. Now, a new statement has announced that all 17 movies of Warner Bros scheduled to release in 2021 will be available to stream through HBO Max while also playing in theaters.

Here’s how you can stream the movies

All the Warner Bros releases slated for 2021 will be simultaneously released at theaters and HBO Max on the exact same day. Existing subscribers can stream the movie for a month before it disappears from the streaming site for a particular amount of time decided by HBO Max and Warner Bros.

Here are all the movies releasing on HBO Max in 2021

'The Little Things' 
'Judas and the Black Messiah' 
'Tom & Jerry'
'Godzilla vs. Kong'
'Mortal Kombat'
'Those Who Wish Me Dead' 
'The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It' 
'In The Heights'
'Space Jam: A New Legacy'
'The Suicide Squad'
'Reminiscence'
'Malignant'
'Dune'
'The Many Saints of Newark' 
'King Richard'
'Cry Macho'
'Matrix 4'

While for all movie enthusiasts who love catching a film from their couch, this decision comes as bliss, others are worried that the moviegoers will now face even less motivation to visit a theater when they can catch the same movie from home without any hassle, making the theaters in business risking more loss after the pandemic caused a major drought this year.

Mike Hogan, the executive digital director of Vanity Fair took it to Twitter to express how this decision will change the dynamics of the moviegoing experience. He shared, “The trouble with saying 'people will still want to see movies on a big screen' is that it's equivalent to saying 'people will still want to listen to vinyl'. It's true, but only for a small group, and your wildly profitable mass business is now a quirky niche for enthusiasts.” Journalist Dan Reilly posed a different opinion and said, “There's still a lot of people who go to theaters just because it's an activity. Can be a date, part of a night out with friends, the end treat of driving 30 minutes to go shopping. It's not an apples to apples comparison, but drinking at home didn't kill the bar industry.”



 



 

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