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Cineplex reports $98.9-million loss with theatres closed for nearly entire quarter

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  • Cineplex reports $98.9-million loss with theatres closed for nearly entire quarter

    The most interesting sentence in this article is "Revenue for the quarter ended June 30 totalled $22 million, plummeting 90 per cent from $438.9 million, while its cash burn rate fluctuated between $15 million and $20 million every month."

    Not that I have any special love for Cineplex in particular, but I can't see any reason why these numbers wouldn't be similar for the rest of the theatre industry, and that's scary indeed.

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/busi...ed-for-nearly/

    Cineplex Inc.‘s chief executive is hoping that ending an agreement with a virtual reality golf company, films debuting in Canada before the U.S. and a slew of COVID-19 measures will right his business as it struggles with mounting costs for movie theatres that sat closed for months.

    Ellis Jacob said Friday that his Toronto-based entertainment company had decided to mutually call off a deal with TopGolf that would have brought its sports complexes to Canada because it’s “simply not an opportune time” to invest in large projects.

    He was simultaneously rejoicing at studios allowing the country to debut new releases like “Spongebob: Sponge Out of Water,” “Unhinged” and Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” ahead of the U.S., which he hoped would draw audiences back to the movies.

    “This is a very unusual occurrence,” Jacob told The Canadian Press. “Given what we have done in terms of keeping the guests safe during the pandemic, we got the international release dates and we are really proud of that.”

    His remarks came as Cineplex reported a loss of $98.9 million or $1.56 per share in its second quarter, compared with a profit of $19.4 million or 31 cents per share in the same quarter last year.

    Revenue for the quarter ended June 30 totalled $22 million, plummeting 90 per cent from $438.9 million, while its cash burn rate fluctuated between $15 million and $20 million every month.

    The company was hurt when it was forced by governments to keep its theatres closed for months during COVID-19, resulting in temporary layoffs, slashed salaries and tussles with landlords over rent.

    Jacob warned analysts on a call Friday morning that the company would take more “bold action” if necessary, but for now, he is focused on welcoming guests to theatres.

    To get them back, Cineplex is offering cheaper movie tickets, reserved and distanced seating, increased cleanings and screenings of NHL and NBA games.

    Jacob said the plan is already working.

    “It is clear that Canadians miss the big screen and want to come back,” he said, noting that he was planning to head to the movies tonight.

    The slate was far from the highly anticipated films, including “Black Widow, “Mulan” and sequels from “Star Wars” and “Avatar” that were once planned for this summer, but were pushed back amid COVID-19.

    “Mulan”-backer Disney has since decided to skip a theatre debut and bring the movie straight to its streaming platform with a premium price of about $30 for viewing.

    Jacob, who has long argued that movie watchers prefer the experience of visiting a theatre to watching at home, said he was “disappointed.”

    “Disney has been very committed to the theatrical window, but this is a situation where they don’t have enough markets where they feel it would be impactful for them,” he said.

    “From talking to them, they say this is more of a one-off and not something they would like to do once this is behind.”

    Jacob argued most studios still value the theatre experience and though they’ve shifted in some cases to streaming, he wasn’t worried that switch would stick around forever or hurt his business.

    He’ll keep an eye on that situation and on managing the fallout from Cineworld Group PLC walking away on June 12 from a $2.8 billion deal to buy the company.

    Cineplex has filed a lawsuit against its former suitor over the failed deal.

    The matter is set to make it to trial in September 2021, but could be delayed further, Jacob said.

  • #2
    Revenue for the quarter ended June 30 totalled $22 million, plummeting 90 per cent from $438.9 million
    maybe i'm missing something, but i make it more like 95%.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Article
      To get them back, Cineplex is offering cheaper movie tickets, reserved and distanced seating, increased cleanings and screenings of NHL and NBA games.
      So if Hollywood won't provide the product customers want to see, "alternative content" here we go...

      Comment


      • #4
        So many theater chains are bleeding red ink and on the verge of ruin. Other theaters have closed permanently. Combine that with the US courts officially overturning the Paramount Consent Decrees. It creates a perfect situation for Disney, Warner Media, CBS-Viacom (Paramount) and Sony to start gobbling up theaters or building their own brand new locations. I wouldn't be surprised to see Netflix, Amazon and Google to get in on the act.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Bobby Henderson View Post
          So many theater chains are bleeding red ink and on the verge of ruin. Other theaters have closed permanently. Combine that with the US courts officially overturning the Paramount Consent Decrees. It creates a perfect situation for Disney, Warner Media, CBS-Viacom (Paramount) and Sony to start gobbling up theaters or building their own brand new locations. I wouldn't be surprised to see Netflix, Amazon and Google to get in on the act.
          Aside from a few key locations in big cities (like Disney's ownership of the El Capitan), I can't see any of these companies picking up theaters even at bargain basement prices and I certainly can't see them building new locations. It's a really lousy business. Even before COVID, AMC has lost $282 million over the last five years, mainly due to debt. They only averaged sales of 92 tickets per day, per screen. Plus (and stupidly in my opinion), the studios all seem to care far more about streaming than about theatrical presentation. While Netflix has supposedly taken the lease on The Plaza in NYC, I think they only did that to support awards eligibility. And Sony owned Loews for some years and then got out of the business. When the studios owned theaters, they produced new films every week. With studios producing 15 films a year, if they owned theaters, they'd have to play each other's films.

          Having said that, if AMC or Regal or other regional chains went under, they might have no choice if only because they don't want to give up the big revenues on popcorn movies.

          Comment


          • #6
            I agree the commercial movie theater business is pretty lousy currently. The margins are terrible. But I think a lot of that would change if big studios and studio-owned cinemas were vertically integrated.

            I still firmly believe the commercial movie theater release platform is what makes it possible to fund big budget 2 hour movies. I think if the major studios did away with the theaters they would see their ability to make big movies diminish, along with a bunch of their fortunes. Streaming is not a panacea for Hollywood's growing number of structural problems.

            Studio bosses have forgotten the main reason why streaming is popular: it's CHEAPER for the consumer. People have been flocking to streaming services because it costs less than watching movies on traditional cable/satellite TV. It's cheaper than buying a bunch of movies on disc. And it's way cheaper than trips to the theater.

            Apparently the studio executives think they're going to make more money than ever before just with streaming. They might have forgot they were pulling in more money around 20 years ago when the theatrical platform, home video retail platform and cable TV platform were all in more healthy shape. Today the streaming platform is cannibalizing other home video release markets (cable, retail discs, theatrical) rather than doing anything to grow each platform. It's all done in a blind obsession with squeezing cash out of an intellectual property as fast as possible.

            So many movies are so bland and predictable that it hasn't really bothered me all that much for theaters to be closed. I haven't missed them as much as I thought I would back in March. Even with that said, I have not been buying or renting many movies at all either.

            I can't even remember the last movie I bought on disc and when. I might binge watch a certain TV series, but that's about it. The "Save the Cat!" model of movie-making has ruined most of my enthusiasm for new movies. I sure don't have any desire to spend $30 on a PVOD rental (like what Disney expects out of the re-make of "Mulan"). Lately a grim new corporate culture has been taking hold in Hollywood. No one knows whose head will roll next. It's already bad enough for the production pipeline to be infected with ADHD stupidity. If top brass personnel can't predict if they'll have their jobs a year from now they won't have any motivation to develop any kind of sound, long-term strategy.

            I think the people in charge of the movie industry are pushing it out onto very thin ice.

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