Filmyzilla.com The Last Witch Hunter

The Last Witch Hunter (Lionsgate, 2015) had a production budget of approximately $90 million. While it performed moderately in North America, its potential revenue in emerging markets was compromised by the proliferation of pirate sites. Among these, Filmyzilla.com—a notorious Indian-based piracy hub—gained notoriety for leaking high-definition copies of the film within days of its theatrical release. This paper explores three key questions:

(Note: The following is written as an objective analysis of internet piracy trends, search intent, and the associated risks. It does not contain or link to illegal copyrighted material.)


Filmyzilla.com is not just a single website; it is a hydra-headed monster. When authorities block one domain (e.g., filmyzilla.com), the operators spawn another (.net, .in, .pet, etc.). It is a prime destination for Hindi-dubbed Hollywood movies, Bollywood blockbusters, and South Indian films. Filmyzilla.com The Last Witch Hunter

Here is how Filmyzilla typically lures users searching for The Last Witch Hunter:

Cam vs. HD: Shortly after release, Filmyzilla leaks "Cam-Rip" (recorded in a theater with a phone). Months later, they leak an "HD-TS" or "WEB-DL" version ripped from streaming services like Amazon Prime or Netflix. The Last Witch Hunter (Lionsgate, 2015) had a


The good news is that The Last Witch Hunter is widely available on legitimate platforms. Why risk your computer's security for a low-quality, pirated version?

Currently, you can typically find The Last Witch Hunter on: Filmyzilla

Based on this case, the paper proposes:

Filmyzilla’s distribution of The Last Witch Hunter violated the Copyright Act of 1976 (17 U.S.C. § 501) and India’s Copyright Act, 1957. Despite repeated DMCA notices, the site remained operational by mirroring content on Russian-hosted servers. Ethically, the case illustrates the “free rider” problem: users access content without paying, while bearing no risk of prosecution due to jurisdictional loopholes.