| Platform | Availability | Price (Approx.) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Amazon Prime Video | Rent or Buy | $3.99 rental | | Apple TV (iTunes) | Rent or Buy | $3.99 rental | | YouTube Movies | Rent or Buy | $3.99 rental | | Google Play | Rent or Buy | $3.99 rental | | Vudu (Fandango) | Rent or Buy | $3.99 rental | | Pure Flix | Subscription (Monthly) | Included with $7.99/mo |
Critics were lukewarm (praising the concept but noting the low production value), but audiences loved it. On Rotten Tomatoes, the audience score hovered above 95% for months. This disparity drove fans to seek the film anywhere they could find it—including server indexes.
To illustrate the real-world implications, consider the fictional (but representative) case of "VoIPLeak 2020." A major teleconferencing provider left an Amazon S3 bucket mislabeled index_of_the_call_2020_backup open to the public. Security researchers discovered: index of the call 2020
The company was sued for $50 million. The index was eventually protected, but copies still circulate on underground forums.
4.1 Opening and Setup
4.2 Inciting Call
4.3 Escalation and Rewrites of the Past
4.4 Climax and Twist
4.5 Resolution
The “Call Wall” and Dealer Hedging: In late 2020, dealers sold massive amounts of call options, especially on tech indices. To remain delta-neutral, they bought the underlying index futures as the market rose — creating a feedback loop of buying pressure. This phenomenon was studied as a driver of the “melt-up.”