The 2020 theatrical release calendar is getting even slimmer in the wake of the announcement that Regal cinemas are temporarily closing, although AMC, North America's largest theater chain, says it will remain open.
Warner Bros. said late Monday that its sci-fi pic āDuneā will now open in October 2021, instead of this December. The studio also pushed back āThe Batmanā to March 2022 and moved up its āMatrixā sequel to Dec. 2021.
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AMC Entertainment reiterated its commitment to stay open and cited a slew of upcoming new releases that it will be playing, including this weekendās new films āThe War With Grandpa,ā with Robert De Niro, and āYellow Rose.ā Roughly 80% of its U.S. locations are currently open.
With the recent exit of the next James Bond film, that leaves a mere handful of big films set to still open in 2020: Pixarās āSoul,ā on Nov. 20, Universalās āThe Croods: A New Age,ā on Nov. 25, Disneyās āDeath on the Nile,ā on Dec. 18 and Warner Bros.ā āWonder Woman 1984,ā at Christmas. Itās an extra hit to the ailing theatrical industry, which endured six months of closures and has had a difficult time restarting business during the pandemic with key markets like New York still closed and an ever-changing release calendar.
Universal Studios announced Tuesday that the latest entry in the āJurassic Parkā series, āJurassic World: Dominion,ā is being pushed back a year until June 2022.
Business has been so shaky that on Monday Cineworld Group Plc said it would temporarily close its 536 Regal cinema locations in the U.S. and 127 Cineworld and Picturehouse venues in the U.K. on Thursday. And last week leading groups representing movie theaters, movie studios and directors issued a dire plea to Congress for financial help for cinemas. They said nearly 70% of small and mid-size theaters could face bankruptcy or closure without assistance.
AMC CEO Adam Aron said in a statement that the companyās agreement with Universal Pictures to shorten the theatrical window, āputs AMC in a position where we can open our theatres when others may feel the need to close.ā
AMC, Aron said, will share in home video on demand revenues with Universal.
But even with new releases on the calendar for the remainder of the year, including high-profile independent and awards contenders like ā Nomadland ā and Regina King's āOne Night in Miami,ā studios have made it clear that they are skittish about releasing their most expensive properties in such a muted North American box office landscape.
Warner Bros. helped provide an early test case with Christopher Nolanās āTenet.ā The film has grossed over $307 million globally, but only $45 million of that has come from North America, which is the world's biggest box office market.
And although there are new films every weekend, back catalog films are regularly claiming spots in the top 10. Just this weekend the 27-year-old āHocus Pocusā claimed the No. 2 spot and the 40-year-old Star Wars film āThe Empire Strikes Backā landed at No. 6.
Since āTenet,ā many studios have pushed at least one big film out of 2020, including āBlack Widow,ā āNo Time to Dieā and āWest Side Story.ā Other films vacated earlier, like āTop Gun: Maverickā and āF9.ā And some studios have experimented by pivoting to video-on-demand releases, like Disney did with its live-action āMulan.ā
The shifting calendar has a domino effect on future releases too. When Warner Bros. moved āDuneā to Oct. 1, 2021, it took āThe Batmanā release date, pushing that film to March 2022.