Skip to main content

Apple TV Plus finally adds this feature that other streaming platforms have — but there’s a catch

Apple TV Plus adds third-party content

The Apple TV Plus Logo
Apple

One of the things that unites most of the best streaming services is that, in addition to all of the original content they produce, they also have a selection of movies and TV shows that originally aired or were created somewhere else. This back catalog leads to a more robust library, and, at least in theory, attracts people who might be turned off by the limitations of seeing only original offerings. This is true for almost every streaming platform with the exception of Apple TV Plus, at least until now.

In anticipation of the 2024 Oscars, Apple TV Plus has announced that more than 50 older movies are hitting the service for the first time. Those films include some award winners and some more populist picks designed to celebrate the broad range of what movies can offer.

Among the titles that are being added on the awards-ier side of things include Titanic, Argo, Gravity, Mad Max: Fury Road, The Wolf of Wall Street, and both volumes of Kill Bill. In addition, the movie is adding blockbusters like 300, Star Trek Into Darkness, Mean Girls, Zoolander, Fast & Furious 6, and Black Hawk Down. All of these titles will be available in a new section called “Great Movies on Apple TV+.”

The Morning Show — Season 3 Official Trailer | Apple TV+

There’s a huge catch that comes with this rollout

Although many may be excited by the prospect of these new titles coming to the service, there’s a pretty huge catch that comes with these new movies. While you may have expected that this move would mean that Apple TV Plus was building out a consistent archive, these movies are time-limited to this year’s Oscars. Some of them will leave the service later in the month of March, while the last ones will expire at the end of April.

This new collection’s idea was to celebrate movies in general and highlight the stars of some of these movies when they also appear in Apple TV projects.

Apple has occasionally hosted content that the streamer did not originally produce, but those deals have been few and far between. Generally speaking, the streamer only hosts content that it owns, and once this limited window closes, the service will go back to offering a much more limited slate of offerings.

In spite of that limited slate, and in part because Apple is not a company that relies on its streaming service to generate profits, Apple has had a number of series that turned into genuine phenomena following their release, including SeveranceTed Lasso, and The Morning Show. They don’t hit every time, but Apple TV Plus has a pretty good batting average, and some subscribers seem pretty happy with those more limited offerings. The lack of a catalog of other movies and shows, though, does limit the overall reach of Apple TV Plus.

Editors' Recommendations

Joe Allen
Contributor
Joe Allen is a freelance culture writer based in upstate New York. His work has been published in The Washington Post, The…
Report: Disney Plus is moving away from Marvel limited series TV shows (but that’s a good thing for fans)
We might actually get multiple seasons now
Iman Vellani as Kamala Khan/Ms. Marvel

After more than a decade of dominating on the big screen, Marvel started to spend a much greater percentage of its time focusing on creating TV series. That change happened with the launch of Disney Plus, and has resulted in a glut of streaming series set in various corners of the MCU. While many of those shows have been solid, and a few have been great, recent news suggests that Marvel may be reevaluating their relationship with Disney Plus shows.

Up until now, almost every single Marvel show was at least initially conceived as a limited series. Marvel shows like Hawkeye and Moon Knight were conceived of as one-and-dones, and only Loki has thus far received a second season. Now following the news that Daredevil: Born Again was getting a hard rework from Marvel, we also learned that Marvel's whole approach to limited series may be changing.

Read more
Apple Music finally got a fan-fave Spotify feature but it’s buried in the app’s settings — how to turn it on
Now you can be the DJ with Apple Music
A person listening to music on their iPhone.

Apple loves to drop updates, telling us our phone is going to do it in the middle of the night (it never does) and then not telling us what's new. We just get to find out along the way when using it. Like, oh, wow, a few new emojis or the ability to set more than one timer is finally a thing. Unfortunately, that means a lot of fun stuff falls through the cracks, and iPhone users don't find out about it until later, and only by accident. There's one thing with the iOS 17 update you'll want to check out now, especially if you love listening to music on your phone. If you've been a Spotify fan because you wish Apple Music would get a little better, they secretly did.  

The feature we all missed
Spotify users are hardcore, living to see that end-of-year wrap-up showing the top songs and artists that got them through the year. There's nothing like being attacked by your phone, letting you know you listened to Taylor Swift for more hours than you went to work. But one feature users love on Spotify is the crossfade function.
Why crossfade is awesome
You know how you hate that awkward silence while the one song you are listening to is ending, but your device hasn't started the next song? You just sit there. Your body might even pause, waiting for your ultimate 2000s jams to start back up so you can continue cleaning during your dance performance. Crossfade helps with that.

Read more
Could F1 follow MLS to Apple TV Plus? Apple is reportedly considering a $2 billion offer
Will F1 move to Apple TV Plus?
Formula 1 cars winding their way down a track.

Formula 1 could be coming to Apple TV Plus in the near future. According to a report in Business F1, the company has "wargamed" the idea of bringing F1 races to their streaming service, and they are now seriously considering making an offer.

This F1 news is believed to have been sparked by the success that Apple has had broadcasting Major League Soccer. The company charges an extra fee to users to watch the games, and it has apparently found success in that model. Business F1 reports that Formula 1 has declined to comment on the report, and also suggested that while Apple is considering an offer, the company has not made one yet.
Apple's offer for F1 could be as much as $2 billion
 

Read more