City Times

BLACK WIDOW Goes Dark as theatres Shut Down in the united States

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U.S. movie theaters have closed nationwide due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, turning dark nearly all of the country’s 40,000-plus screens in an unpreceden­ted shutdown.

With most of Hollywood’s March and April releases already postponed, the Walt Disney Co. on Tuesday also cleared out its May releases as well, including Marvel’s Black Widow.

The largest chains had tried to remain open even as Hollywood postponed its upcoming release plans and guidelines for social distancing steadily diminished the recommende­d size of crowds. But after President Donald Trump on Monday urged against gatherings of more than 10 people, AMC Theaters, the nation’s largest chain, said Tuesday its theaters would close altogether.

AMC said the latest guidelines made movie theater operations “essentiall­y impossible.” It said it would close all locations in the U.S. for at least six to 12 weeks. Regal, the second largest chain, said Monday that its theaters would close until further notice.

The Walt Disney Co. also indefinite­ly postponed Black Widow, which had been set to open May 1. Marvel movies have for years been the regular kickoff to the summer movie going season. The company also put off the releases of David Copperfiel­d (May 8) and The Woman in the Window (May 15).

With movie theaters locked down for the foreseeabl­e future, some studios took the extraordin­ary step of funneling new or recently released films onto home viewing platforms. Universal Pictures said Monday it will make its current and upcoming films available for on-demand rental, becoming the first major studio to break the traditiona­l theatrical window of 90 days due to the pandemic.

The studio said it will put movies currently in theaters — Invisible Man, The Hunt, Emma— up for rental as early as Friday. It also said that Trolls World Tour, one of the only major releases left on the April calendar, will debut in theaters and on-demand services simultaneo­usly. A 48-hour rental will cost $19.99.

Most of Europe’s cinemas have already shut down, as have those in China, India and elsewhere. North America’s shutdown came gradually. On Sunday, the mayors of New York and Los Angeles ordered their cities’ theaters closed. Government­s in Massachuse­tts and Quebec also closed theaters.

Cinemark, the nation’s third-largest chain, also announced its theaters would shutter Wednesday. Chains including the Alamo Drafthouse, Landmark Theatres, Showcase Cinemas and Bow Tie Cinemas have closed.

New York’s Film Forum marquee, usually adorned with titles, instead bore a paraphrase­d Franklin Roosevelt quotation: “We have nothing to fear but fear itself.”

The Alamo Drafthouse put an “Intermissi­on” card up on its website.

“This news – this situation – is devastatin­g,” the 41-theater circuit based in Austin, Texas, wrote. “When we re-open after this unpreceden­ted and indefinite hiatus, it will be in a dramatical­ly altered world, and in an industry that’s been shaken to its core.”

Over the weekend, ticket sales plunged to their lowest levels in at least 20 years at U.S. and Canadian theaters. Not since a quiet September weekend in 2000 has weekend boxoffice revenue been so low, according to data firm Comscore.

Universal’s move could be seen as either a watershed moment for Hollywood or an aberration due to extreme circumstan­ces. With few exceptions, the major studios have guarded the 90-day exclusivit­y window even as digital newcomers like Netflix and

Amazon have challenged it. For the studios, box office still is the primary revenue generator. Last week, the Motion Picture Associatio­n said worldwide ticket sales reached $42.2 billion last year.

The National Associatio­n of Theater Owners, the trade group that represents movie exhibitors, made its first statement on the shutdowns Tuesday, acknowledg­ing the hardship facing movie theaters but also pledging that the theatrical window will resume once the crisis has passed. The organizati­on said speculatio­n that this will permanentl­y expand home streaming of Hollywood studio production­s “ignores the underlying financial logic of studio investment in theatrical titles.”

“To avoid catastroph­ic losses to the studios, these titles must have the fullest possible theatrical release around the world,” the associatio­n said in a statement. “While one or two releases may forgo theatrical release, it is our understand­ing starring Scarlett Johansson has been put on hold while Anya Taylor Joy’s Emma will be up for rental soon. from discussion­s with distributo­rs that the vast majority of deferred releases will be reschedule­d for theatrical release as life returns to normal.”

Nbcunivers­al is prepping its own streaming service, dubbed Peacock, but it isn’t to launch until July 15. On Sunday, the Walt Disney Co. made Frozen 2 available on its streaming service, Disney Plus. But that film had already completed its theatrical run. Its digital release didn’t break the traditiona­l 90-day theatrical exclusivit­y window.

And Hollywood’s major upcoming releases aren’t currently heading for the home; they’re being held for when theaters reopen. Paramount Pictures’ A Quiet Place Part II, earlier slated for release Friday, has been removed from the schedule. Disney’s Mulan and the James Bond film No Time to Die have been put off. Universal earlier pushed its latest Fast and Furious movie, F9, from late May to April of next year. AP

David Copperfiel­d

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 ??  ?? Black Widow
Black Widow
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 ??  ?? The Hunt will be available for rent soon while the release of (poster pictured below) has been delayed.
The Hunt will be available for rent soon while the release of (poster pictured below) has been delayed.

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