This was posted 13 years 10 months ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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$7 Village Movie Tickets!

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Exclusive Friends and Fans offer, is available for a limited time only!

Purchase a $7 ticket voucher and use it for any movie at Village Cinemas.

  • $7 ticket for use until March 30
  • Available for pre-purchase online from February 23 to March 8
  • Redeemable online and at the Ticket Box

Ticket vouchers are available for pre-purchase online, for a limited time only.

Ticket vouchers can be used for any session from February 23 - March 30 2011 and are redeemable online or at the Ticket Box.

Don't miss out on this great offer, available for a limited time only!

Terms and conditions: The Friends & Fans $7 ticket offer is available for purchase online only from February 23 - March 8, 2011 until midnight (11:59pm). This offer is available for redemption at the ticket box and online (a $1 booking fee applies for all online bookings) from 23 February until 30 March 2011. Seats are subject to availability at the time of purchase. This offer is not valid for Gold Class sessions or for special events or with any other special offer, unless specified by Village Cinemas and surcharges will apply for VMAX and 3D sessions. This offer is not transferable or refundable for cash and is not for re-sale. This offer is valid at the following Village Cinemas Locations – Airport West, Century City, Coburg, Crown, Doncaster, Fountain Gate, Geelong, Jam Factory, Karingal, Knox ,Morwell, Rivoli, Southland, Shepparton, Sunshine, Werribee, Eastlands, Glenorchy, Hobart and Launceston.

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closed Comments

  • Awww. U have to use credit card. :/

    • or debit card

  • dupe? or was it another cinema?

  • Has anyone heard how much the surcharge would be for 3D? :)
    Hoyts was just $3

    • +1

      $3 for 3d surcharge + $2 for vmax screen

      most village screen now is vmax anyway. so it cost you total $5 at least..

      hoyts have better deal only cost $3 for 3D and Extreme screen

    • +1

      Hoyts is a $2.50 surcharge, with no extra charge for extreme screen btw, they are also valid sliightly longer until 6 April 2011.

      Upside with village though is that you can book online so for big movies or busy nights it is good.

      • Will Village charge an extra surcharge for booking online?

        I thought I read that regarding some of their tickets.

        • Yes, there is $1 online booking fee per ticket.
          But Lunawinter is correct that the ups with Village you don't need to queue to redeem your voucher and can conveniently book a movie and choose a seat online at anytime.

          With Hoyts though, you will have to redeem the voucher at the cinema you want to go and if I understand correctly also at the time you want to watch the movie - can't use it to watch tomorrow's or next two days' movie.

  • Are there any decent films between now and March 30?
    $7 is an excellent price, but I rarely go to cinema more than once a year.

  • +2

    I highly recommend The King's Speech. Very good. Even for older teens. We saw this with these tickets- what a saving:)

    • +1

      Yes Kings Speech is well worth the price of admission.

  • +1

    Shouldn't you put VIC and TAS only in the title?

  • Is there an option for an e-Voucher delivered to an email address immediately, or is it available only as a card voucher sent by regular mail to an address?

    • +1

      It can be either. Bought it as an e-voucher and used it to watch "The King's Speech" just this evening. An excellent film worthy of Oscars and Academy awards.

  • Blitzed the Oscars:) Best film, best director, best original screenplay, best actor.
    There's something else here: when my mother told me my 80-something aunt had gone to the cinema, on her own, to see The King's Speech, I realised how successful it has been (in this country, anyway) in harnessing the awesome strength of 'the grey pound' ($$). People who haven't gone to the cinema in 10 or 20 years are going to see The King's Speech. Older people are generally ignored or patronised in the movies: so this film's mighty triumph is a modest assertion of their existence.
    A great movie.

    • -2

      Film is highly overrated. The fact that Oscars, the biggest con of the film industry, liked it only proves it further. Oscars have not had validity for at least the last fourty years, they only exist now to celebrate and advertise themselves rather then push the industry they represent. It fails to address true differences between royality and the normal people a part from one scene. The shots are horrible, there are no truly beautiful scenes, e.g. they are out in the English countryside yet you obtain no sense of scope when you are there. And one would be mistaken for thinking that the King was annoucing World War 2.

      All the greatest films were never 'worthy' in recieving Oscars, so I see no point in mentioning the masterbatory event now.

      "People who haven't gone to the cinema in 10 or 20 years"? Lol? And which people are these? How does this film do justice to these older people? To me this film was created through the ignorance of their lives and what happened, not through the experience or knowledge. Even if these so-called audience existed (which they don't), does not at all mean the fact that they may have enjoyed the film make it overly good (or more importantly, memorable or historical).

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