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Corona Virus Effect On Theatres In The USA

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  • Frank Cox
    replied
    They just closed all of the schools in Saskatchewan, so I guess that's my cue to stop as well.

    Sigh... I never thought I would see a day like this.

    I borrowed Arnie to make my announcement:

    http://melvilletheatre.com/playing.html

    Leave a comment:


  • Mike Blakesley
    replied
    I think it's great that everyone is positive the virus will pack up its bags and go home by the end of March. I wonder what makes them think it's going to be over in two weeks?

    I'm fully expecting it to last longer than that. I talked to a farmer friend of mine today, he said he thinks it's going to go two months... at least.

    In Canada, at least one province is preparing to declare the school year to be over and anybody who has passing grades will either graduate, or be promoted to the next grade. So that's about 10 or 12 weeks worth of school gone.

    Our film booker told me that all the studio people are already working from home, and there's a chance the studio offices will shut down, so they won't be able to book anything if that happens. I guess they figure the biggest markets are already closed, and others are dropping like flies, so what's the point in staying open. He told me he's expecting by the end of the week there'll be an order from on high somewhere that ALL theaters should shut down.

    We're booked with "Onward" for this coming weekend...I guess we'll see if we're still open by then. No cases in this county, as of yet.

    Leave a comment:


  • James Wyrembelski
    replied
    Michigan has mandated all theatres close today at 3pm until March 30th.

    Leave a comment:


  • Jim Cassedy
    replied
    Deja Vu! - We all know that many theaters across the US
    were shut down during the 1918 flu epidemic, but while
    doing some research over the weekend, I came across
    this item in BOXOFFICE Magazine, from December 1940:
    You do not have permission to view this gallery.
    This gallery has 1 photos.

    Leave a comment:


  • Nathan McLaughlin
    replied
    Great idea Carsten , lets here some good ones .

    Leave a comment:


  • Carsten Kurz
    replied
    Use your marquee signs to strengthen and cheer-up your community! We started last night.

    Leave a comment:


  • Martin McCaffery
    replied
    Last night, right before the latest CDC guidelines, we decided tonight would be our last night. I'm not even going to bother with tonight. 2 weeks we can handle. A full 8 weeks will be close to insurmountable. We're a non-profit , so can beg for money. My deepest sympathy to all of the commercial "mom and pops" out there who are going to get hit hard. And to all of their employees.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sarah Treichel
    replied
    Originally posted by Marcel Birgelen View Post
    Yeah, stuff isn't looking rosy. While the bigger chains will probably recover from this, it's to be seen how many smaller independents survive this complete lockdown. While many governments have promised "emergency loans" for suffering small businesses, we all know they almost never end up where they're needed most.
    It seems like the time has come to do the right thing and close, even if the virus hasn't yet been found in our community.. It seems selfish and wrong to risk lives by encouraging people to leave their homes and hang out together, no matter how much we disinfect. On the other hand, we still have our usual stacks of bills coming in and if we don't have movies, we don't have money. I don't want people to die, but I also don't want to end up out of business, bankrupt, and homeless. Because we live above the lobby. If we can't pay for oil, electricity, and rent, then no heat, no lights, no roof. These are not easy decisions small businesses are facing, especially if they're on shaky ground or just getting started, like us. I doubt any AMC execs are dealing with these kinds of stakes.

    Leave a comment:


  • Frank Cox
    replied
    https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montr...nday-1.5498405

    Bars, clubs, gyms and other public spaces closed until further notice in Quebec
    • Recreational and leisure sites are closed until further notice, including bars, clubs, movie theatres and gyms.
    • Restaurants can stay open, but asked not to serve more than 50 per cent of capacity.
    • The closure affects ski hills, amusement parks, water parks, arcades, zoos and aquariums in Quebec.
    • Indoor classes like yoga, dance, and spinning are closed, as well as spas and saunas.
    • 39 confirmed cases in Quebec, up from 24 on Saturday. A further 1,186 cases are under investigation.
    • Free child- and daycare for essential service providers (health-care workers, police, firefighters), as well as 60,000 free babysitting spots for children aged four to 13.
    • The Assembly of Quebec Catholic Bishops is recommending all church events be cancelled or postponed, including funerals, marriages and baptisms.
    • Starting Monday, the Order of Quebec dentists is postponing all non-urgent appointments for a two week period.

    Leave a comment:


  • Marcel Birgelen
    replied
    Yeah, stuff isn't looking rosy. While the bigger chains will probably recover from this, it's to be seen how many smaller independents survive this complete lockdown. While many governments have promised "emergency loans" for suffering small businesses, we all know they almost never end up where they're needed most.

    If I'd be running a cinema that's still open right now, I'd call the studio to get some "classics" playing every night.

    While the world ends, let's at least celebrate it with a bunch of good, mediocre and outright bad movies...

    - The Andromeda Strain
    - The Crazies (1973)
    - Contagion (2002)
    - Contagion (2011)
    - Outbreak
    - 28 Days Later
    - 28 Weeks Later
    - Cabin Fever
    - Cargo
    - Dawn of the Deah (1978)
    - Dawn of the Death (2004)
    - Twelve Monkeys
    - The Last Man On Earth
    - I'm Legend
    - Shaun of the Dead

    The list could go on and on. Yes, it would be a licensing nightmare... but I'm sure you'll grab some attention.

    Ah, and if you applied for that liquor license, you should serve Coronas alongside it...

    Leave a comment:


  • Leo Enticknap
    replied
    I did a service call to a large mall 'plex in the northern suburbs of LA on Friday. It was a long and nasty repair, with the result that I didn't get out of there until 8.30pm. When I left, the place was a ghost town - no more than a dozen or so customers in the lobby.

    Originally posted by Jim Cassedy
    he Box Office itself was all closed up & covered with signs advising patrons that they had no B O staff, and could only buy tickets online or at a nearby kiosk.
    The gas station about half a mile from my home has stopped accepting payment in cash, for hygiene reasons. While I can live with that (though I hate paying by card at a gas station, because gas pump card readers are the highest risk of all for having been hacked and/or had skimmers attached to them), I was not impressed that they weren't willing to let me buy gas with my credit card at the cash rate, and still charged me the extra 10c a gallon they usually charge for paying by card.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mike Blakesley
    replied
    Well the good thing about all this is, when the theater haters start whining about "Look at the 2020 grosses, how bad they sucked" we can all say "It was because of the virus, you idiots."

    Leave a comment:


  • Carsten Kurz
    replied
    this is all gonna end badly...

    All cinemas closed down in most european countries now. Same with all businesses dealing with entertainment, recreation. Bars, clubs, gyms, Kindergarten, schools, libraries, etc. closed. Currently, most closures are timed two to four weeks. Though two weeks of easter holidays over here are part of that period.

    I'd say, prepare for similar things to happen in the US.

    - Carsten
    Last edited by Carsten Kurz; 03-15-2020, 07:29 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Frank Cox
    replied
    I know what you mean about what are you going to play. I figure I've got about four, possibly five, more weeks of movies that I could play and then I'll just run out of movies.

    My wife handed me a shopping list today and I trotted off to the grocery store as usual, thinking not much of it until I walked in the door. The place looked like the aftermath of the zombie apocalypse. I don't think I've ever seen so many empty shelves. No milk in the fridge at all, of any size or brand. My wife uses dried milk to make bread and there was none of that on the shelf either. I was talking to the woman who's in charge of ordering the stuff (and manages the place on the weekends), and she said that they've sold more stuff in this past week than they usually sell in the week before Christmas and they just hadn't ordered the stock with that expectation. I mentioned the dried milk being gone and she said, "Yeah, and nobody ever buys that. We usually put out three or four bags and that's enough for a couple of weeks."

    I've never seen anything like this before. Especially when you consider that nothing (absoultely nothing) bad has happened around here. So far, at least.

    Leave a comment:


  • Mike Blakesley
    replied
    So far, things are normalish here - we're playing "Call of the Wild" and have had decent crowds. Of course there's no way to tell if crowds would have been better without the virus, but there are no confirmed cases in our county (yet). And only 4 in Montana at this moment, all in the larger cities.

    For now we're just doing business as usual. I've implemented a few small enhancements to our usual cleaning procedures,and I've instructed the staff not to do any refills in the same cup -- they should use a new cup. And we're wiping down some surfaces with Clorox wipes that we used to just clean with Windex. I'm propping open the entry door to the lobby so people don't have to touch the handles. If it warms up enough, I'll do the same with the outside entry door, although I can't do that right now since it's 14 degrees here.

    The school is still open too, although they have declared that any student who has been out of state in the past 14 days, or been in contact with anyone who has been out of state recently, has to stay out of school.for two weeks. The state high school association cancelled the state basketball tournaments midstream, after two days of play, and declared the semifinal winners to be "co-champions."

    What makes this worse (as I see it) is the fact that there's no real end date for this.
    That is my worry, right there. I guess my hope is, with all the news coming from the cities, the smaller counties around the state will be able to hunker down and ride this out. But what happens if we THINK we've ridden it out, and new cases start appearing in, say, July? Does the whole merry-go-round start over again?

    My other biggest concern is, what are we gonna play? Six weeks worth of shows we were planning to play on the break have evaporated. We'll need to fill those spaces with something and still hope to pay the bills.

    I'm remembering the H1N1 virus a few years ago, which was uber-scary, yet nothing much was cancelled and people mostly seemed to go about their business as normal, at least around here. I can't help but think a lot of this panic has been stirred up by the news media. There's a lot of "the media should just STFU" going around on Facebook.

    Scary times, Makes me wonder what the NEXT big "thing" will be.

    Leave a comment:

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