I am talking about the combination of Cinema 10 and the 10 Premium movie channels every night on VOOM. For the latest movies available (other than PPV) the 10 Premium channels (HBO, SHOWTIME, CINEMAX, STARZ, ENCORE & THE MOVIE CHANNEL all with East & West satellites except the latter 2) give me a great choice for an evening's viewing all in HD! My alternative is Cinema 10 which I am glad is not competing for the latest movies. Otherwise it would be a duplication of the Premium channels since only so many movies are available. Their collection of films from the 60's - 90's provides a choice to see great or even classic films from the past. So between the 20 HD movie channels I have to choose from every night I can usually find a film to watch.
Now if you were on DirecTV (I still carry it for NFL Ticket) you would only have a choice of 3 channels of films in HD; HDNET MOVIES, HBO & SHOWTIME. 3 vs. 20. That's why I like VOOM. I remember what it was like turning off the Tv because there was nothing on in HD and going to Blockbuster to rent a film so I could see it as the Director intended, not with 48% of the picture gone because it was in 4:3 (or so-called "fullscreen") format.
I'm sure others have their special interests; sports, art, travel or music. But then that's why there are choices. (I didn't buy my HDTV to watch re-runs of Hogan's Heroes or a 4:3 SD picture stretched and distorted)
Now if you were on DirecTV (I still carry it for NFL Ticket) you would only have a choice of 3 channels of films in HD; HDNET MOVIES, HBO & SHOWTIME. 3 vs. 20. That's why I like VOOM. I remember what it was like turning off the Tv because there was nothing on in HD and going to Blockbuster to rent a film so I could see it as the Director intended, not with 48% of the picture gone because it was in 4:3 (or so-called "fullscreen") format.
I'm sure others have their special interests; sports, art, travel or music. But then that's why there are choices. (I didn't buy my HDTV to watch re-runs of Hogan's Heroes or a 4:3 SD picture stretched and distorted)