Blockbuster, colloquially known as the Last Blockbuster, is a
video rental store in
Bend, Oregon. In 2018, it became the last Blockbuster store in the United States, and in 2020, it became the world's last remaining retail store using the
Blockbuster brand.[2][3][4][5]
History
Located at the intersection of
U.S. Route 20 and Revere Avenue, the
Blockbuster in
Bend, Oregon, was opened by Ken and Debbie Tisher in 1992 as the second location of Pacific Video, a small
video rental store chain in the state.[6] They previously attempted to negotiate a location by a
Shopko near
U.S. Route 97.[7] In an interview with The Bulletin regarding his first store, Tisher stated that he wanted to approach video business as a "
mom-and-pop store".[7] In 2000, Tisher converted it into a Blockbuster
franchise store.[8] Sandi Harding has been the general manager since 2004.[9]
Blockbuster LLC closed all of its corporate-owned stores by early 2014, leaving the Bend location as one of 50 remaining franchise stores.[10] In July 2018, it became the last remaining Blockbuster in the United States, and in March 2019, the last in the world.[11]Dish Network, the owner of the Blockbuster trademark, no longer grants new franchises with the Blockbuster name, which has cemented the Bend store's status as the last Blockbuster.[12]
The location has become a popular tourist destination since becoming the last Blockbuster. Ken Tisher, who still owns the store,[13] continues to license the Blockbuster trademark from Dish Network on a yearly basis, which also allows the location to sell merchandise using the name.[3] The store stocks around 1,200 titles and has an estimated 4,000 members who regularly rent movies.[14][15]
In 2018, 10 Barrel, a local brewery, released a dark
ale celebrating the store, named The Last Blockbuster (with flavor hints of
red licorice);[16] it was released at a
block party celebrating the store (when it had become the last in the U.S.). The Ellen DeGeneres Show visited the store for a prank
hidden camera segment in May 2019 (when it had become the last Blockbuster in the world).[17] The store is the subject of the 2020 documentary film The Last Blockbuster, created by Bend filmmakers and featuring various celebrities, such as
Kevin Smith,
Brian Posehn, and
Ione Skye; it was released for sale and rent on
DVD and
VHS, as well as for streaming on
Netflix.[18][19]
The store was featured as a central plot point in the second episode of
the 21st season of Family Guy, titled "Bend or Blockbuster".[23] The Netflix sitcom Blockbuster (2022), starring
Randall Park and
Melissa Fumero, is based on a fictionalized version of the last-remaining Blockbuster.[24]
In 2023, the store released a commercial on
Instagram which first ran at the same time as the
Super Bowl LVII halftime show. The ad features a lone
cockroach journeying across the aftermath of an apparent
global catastrophe until it arrives at the last Blockbuster, which is still open.[25][26][27] The store saw an uptick in sales following the ad's release.[28]
Memorabilia
The store displays several pieces of film memorabilia that formerly belonged to actor
Russell Crowe, including his hood from Robin Hood (2010), jockstrap from the 2005 movie Cinderella Man, robe and shorts from Cinderella Man (2005), vest from Les Misérables (2012), and director's chairs from American Gangster (2007). The pieces were gifted from the last operating Alaskan Blockbuster in
Anchorage following the closure in July 2018. The items were originally donated to the Alaska store for an April 2018 segment of Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.[29]