Posted on 04/29/2020 1:17:10 AM PDT by nickcarraway
AMC Theatres has hit hard at Universal Pictures, announcing it will no longer play any of the studios films in the wake of NBCUniversal CEO Jeff Shells promise to open titles on premium and in theaters at the same time.
Universal used the PVOD format to release Trolls World Tour on April 10 amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and widespread theater closures rather than wait for theaters to re-open which is unlikely to occur until mid-summer. The studio revealed Tuesday that Trolls World Tour took in $100 million in premium VOD rentals in its first three weeks of play in North America, a result that will push the film toward profitability.
The results for Trolls World Tour have exceeded our expectations and demonstrated the viability of PVOD, Shell told the Wall Street Journal. As soon as theaters reopen, we expect to release movies on both formats.
Prior to the pandemic, studios typically waited 90 days after a theatrical opening to release films digitally.
AMC Theaters chairman-CEO Adam Aron attacked the notion of breaking that 90-day window in a strongly worded letter to Universal Filmed Entertainment Group chairman Donna Langley, saying the change in releasing policy is unacceptable.
It is disappointing to us, but Jeffs comments as to Universals unilateral actions and intentions have left us with no choice, he said. Therefore, effectively immediately AMC will no longer play any Universal movies in any of our theaters in the United States, Europe or the Middle East, Aron said in the letter.
This policy affects any and all Universal movies per se, goes into effect today and as our theaters reopen, and is not some hollow or ill-considered threat. Incidentally, this policy is not aimed solely at Universal out of pique or to be punitive in any way, it also extends to any movie maker who unilaterally abandons current windowing practices absent good faith negotiations between us, so that they as distributor and we as exhibitor both benefit and neither are hurt from such changes, Aron said. Currently, with the press comment today, Universal is the only studio contemplating a wholesale change to the status quo. Hence, this immediate communication in response.
Universals unilateral pronouncements on this issue are unpalatable to us, as has always been the case, AMC is willing to sit down with Universal to discuss different windows strategies and different economic models between your company and ours, he said. However, in the absence of such discussions, and an acceptable conclusion thereto, our decades of incredibly successful business activity together has sadly come to an end.
If AMC sticks to its guns, it will forego showing a number of potential Universal hits such as F9, the latest iteration in the Fast & Furious franchise, due out April 2; Minions: The Rise of Gru, due on July 2, 2021; andSing 2, due on Dec. 22, 2021; and Jurassic World: Dominion, currently schedule for a June, 2021, launch.
A Universal Pictures spokesperson responded to AMCs decision by defending itself: Our goal in releasing Trolls: World Tour on PVOD was to deliver entertainment to people who are sheltering at home, while movie theatres and other forms of outside entertainment are unavailable. Based on the enthusiastic response to the film, we believe we made the right move. In fact, given the choice of not releasing Trolls: World Tour, which would not only have prevented consumers from experiencing the movie but also negatively impacted our partners and employees, the decision was clear.
The spokesperson also said Unviersal was disappointed by AMCs move and by statements by the National Association of Theatre Owners.
Our desire has always been to efficiently deliver entertainment to as wide an audience as possible, Universal said. We absolutely believe in the theatrical experience and have made no statement to the contrary. As we stated earlier, going forward, we expect to release future films directly to theatres, as well as on PVOD when that distribution outlet makes sense. We look forward to having additional private conversations with our exhibition partners but are disappointed by this seemingly coordinated attempt from AMC and NATO to confuse our position and our actions.
Shells comments came a day after Universal decided to opt out of a theatrical release for The King of Staten Island a semi-autobiographical comedy starring Pete Davidson and directed by Judd Apatow and go to video on demand. The King of Staten Island will premiere on home entertainment June 12, a week before it was scheduled to debut on the big screen.
Rival studios have also been experimenting with PVOD recently with Warner Bros. releasing Scoob, a cartoon based on Scooby-Doo characters, directly on digital rental services next month, while Disney announced Artemis Fowl would launch exclusively on Disney Plus in June.
NATO weighed in Tuesday on Shells disclosure on Trolls World Tour, asserting that the PVOD performance of the animated family comedy reflected unique circumstances rather than a shift in consumer attitudes.
This performance is indicative of hundreds of millions of people isolated in their homes seeking entertainment, not a shift in consumer movie viewing preference, the trade group said. It is not surprising that people under shelter-in-home ordinances for weeks on end with increasingly limited entertainment options would take advantage of the movies direct-to-VOD move to keep children entertained, even at a premium price. Further, Universal heavily marketed the title as a theatrical release, in theaters and elsewhere, for weeks on end. That is unlikely to recur in normal times, and those costs havent been disclosed.
Universal does not have reason to use unusual circumstances in an unprecedented environment as a springboard to bypass true theatrical releases, said NATO president and CEO John Fithian. Theaters provide a beloved immersive, shared experience that cannot be replicated an experience that many of the VOD viewers of this film would have participated in had the world not been sequestered at home, desperate for something new to watch with their families. We are confident that when theaters reopen, studios will continue to benefit from the global theatrical box office, followed by traditional home release.
NATO also said that transactional video is in secular decline, asserting that sales and rentals of individual titles to the home were $24.9 billion in 2004 and shrank 62 percent to $9.3 billion in 2019.
NATO issued another statement on Tuesday night disputing Universals assertion that AMC and NATO had coordinated their statements: NATO and AMC did not coordinate those statements in any way. Indeed, AMC had no comment on NATOs draft statement when sent to NATOs Board of Directors, nor did AMC participate in the Board deliberations regarding that statement. Regarding AMCs reported letter to Universal, NATO had no involvement with nor knowledge of that letter before reading about it in the press.
Without any knowledge of the facts, or the common courtesy to inquire about those facts, Universal nonetheless made the reckless charge this evening that the company is disappointed by this seemingly coordinated attempt from AMC and NATO to confuse our position and our actions. Unfortunately Universal has a destructive tendency to both announce decisions affecting their exhibitor partners without actually consulting with those partners, and now of making unfounded accusations without consulting with their partners, NATO added.
AMCs fight with Universal comes with the chain already embattled. Facing the prospect of staying shut for several more months due to the pandemic, parent AMC Entertainment unveiled plans on April 16 to raise $500 million in new debt to improve its balance sheet. The funds from the senior notes offering, which will have to be repaid in 2025, should be enough to keep the company going until the middle of the summer, AMC said in a filing.
Wall Street analysts have been speculating this month that the chain may also be on the brink of filing for bankruptcy. The likelihood of a bankruptcy reorganization doesnt mean that AMCs 634 locations in the U.S. and Canada and more than 1,000 venues worldwide will be closing their doors for good.
It’s time to bring back the drive-in theater!
AMC: waaaah - our business model has turned into liquid manure and we hate you!
Theatres are going to be in heaps of trouble if this becomes the norm.
Isn’t AMC going bankrupt? Universal can buy them and fire the idiots trying to boycott them.
Doesn’t AMC currently have Chicomm investors? If so, Universal is better off not dealing with them, anyway. #BoycottChina
Hope they do go bankrupt.
China owned
You cram yourself into a big cavernous box filled with potentially sick people yapping on their cellphones, with screaming kids kicking the back of your seat, with nothing but overpriced popcorn, candy, and sugar soda to enjoy, wondering what that “stuff” on your seat really is, and why your shoes are sticking to the floor.
Why would anyone go to a theater to see a movie?
Some people dont really watch the movie!
Doesnt AMC currently have Chicomm investors? If so, Universal is better off not dealing with them, anyway. #BoycottChina
Agreed! I remembered seeing that AMC is a China-backed company. Reading the article with that piece of information in mind made me want to cheer for Universal.
Blockbuster Video says, “Welcome to my world!”
Boycott the filthy Communist Chinese-owned movie chain. Just like Smithfield, the average Joe has no idea that the Communists own the AMC
AMC can go extinct and the nation will not whimper. If it goes bankrupt, the court should not grant it’s continued existence but just insists it’s assets be sold as the only way to pay it’s obligations; acknowledging that future revenues are iffy.
Then, instead of some mainland Chinese billionaire, some American investors can pick up the pieces, at discount, and start over.
Why would anyone go to a theater to see a movie?
This is the exact question I asked back in 2009 when I last stepped into a movie theater. Movie theaters have been on the precipice of extinction for several years now, given that we have so many streaming options that we can access at home. All of this 24-7, virus, 'fear-porn' in the media has probably pushed the movie theater model over the cliff and accelerated its extinction.
Spot on some are in the mid-west and are doing good business.
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