I haven't gone to a movie theater in decades. I wait until it comes out on a streaming service.
As to games, my value is this: a minimum of 1 hour playing time per $1 cost. Keeping in mind I've spend two thousand hours playing various forms of Fallout, and over a thousand apiece of 7DD and HoI4.
The cost-per-hour thing is pretty interesting.
The best value in my Steam library by far is
Stardew Valley. I bought it for $12 a few years ago, and I've played it for 2,210 hours (and counting), so it breaks down to about half a penny per hour.
The second-best value is
Subnautica. I bought it while it was still in Early Access for $20, and I've played it 1103 hours...almost two cents per hour.
And it looks like the third-best value is
The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. I bought this one twice (the regular version and the 64-bit version), and both times I paid the release price. (I was young and foolish.) I also bought the DLCs for their release price. In all, it looks like I spent $113.97 on a game that I've played for 1332 hours, about 9 cents per hour.
The worst value for a game that I bought was
Red Dead Redemption 2, which I paid full price ($60) for because my buddies wanted to meet up online and play together during the pandemic lockdowns. The online gaming never happened, but I still ended up playing it for 82 hours by myself before I put it down. That's $0.73 per hour--less than the "dollar per hour" cutoff, but almost a hundred times more expensive than other games on my list.
(I just checked, and RDR2 is still full price on Steam, four years later. Yeah, good luck with that.)