- 1). Take a trip to Wal-Mart, which has multiple DVD bargain bins that range anywhere from $5 to $10 per DVD. These are usually older movies that they don't feel like keeping in stock.
- 2). Check on Amazon.com for used movies that start as low as a buck. Search for the title you want, then click on "Buy New or Used." You can get some great bargains here (see Resources below).
- 3). Visit Blockbuster and check out their used collection. A few years back, Blockbuster started to allow you to trade movies in for store credit, and now each individual Blockbuster has its own eclectic collection of films.
- 4). Check out eBay for batches of used movies you can buy. People unload anywhere from individual discs to hundreds of DVDs that you can bid on at once (see Resources below).
- 5). Check out the schedules for HBO, Showtime or Starz for movies you want. Then pop a blank disc into your DVD recorder and record the film as you watch it. The upside is the low cost, but the downside is blank DVDs don't have many repeat uses in them, and the picture and sound quality won't be as good as purchased discs.
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