Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

AMC to open some movie theaters next week with retro 1920 ticket prices

- By Jake Coyle Post-Gazette staffer Kevin Kirkland contribute­d.

NEW YORK — AMC Theatres, the nation’s largest movie theater chain, will reopen in the U.S. on Aug. 20 with retro ticket prices of 15 cents per movie.

AMC Entertainm­ent, which owns the chain, said Thursday that it expects to open the doors to more than 100 cinemas — or about a sixth of its nationwide locations — on Thursday with throwback pricing for a day.

AMC Loews at the Waterfront in West Homestead said on its website Friday that it would reopen then with “safe & clean policies with you in mind,” but did not mention the 15-cent opening-day promotion. The websites for AMC Classic South Hills Village and AMC Classic Mt. Lebanon at the Galleria said they would reopen Sept. 3.

During its opening-day promotion, AMC will show catalog films, including “Ghostbuste­rs,” “Black Panther,” “Back to the Future” and “Grease.” Those older films will continue to play afterward for $5.

AMC theaters have reopened in numerous internatio­nal countries but have remained shuttered in the U.S. since March. The chain touted the reopening as “Movies in 2020 at 1920 Prices.”

After several false starts due to a summer rise in coronaviru­s cases throughout much of the U.S., widespread moviegoing is currently set to resume in late August. Regal Cinemas, the second largest chain, is to reopen some U.S. locations on Friday.

AMC confirmed that Disney’s much-delayed “New Mutants” will debut in theaters Aug. 28, with Christophe­r Nolan’s “Tenet” to follow Sept. 3. Warner Bros. is planning to release “Tenet” a week earlier internatio­nally, including in Canada. A handful of smaller new releases are also planned for late August, including “Unhinged,” a thriller from Solstice Studios with Russell Crowe, and Armando Iannucci’s “Personal History of David Copperfiel­d,” from Disney’s Fox Searchligh­t.

AMC said Thursday is expects about two-thirds of its theaters will be open in time for “Tenet.” Several states, including California and New York, are yet to allow movie theaters to reopen.

AMC and other chains have said they will operate at reduced capacity to facilitate social distancing, along with increased theater cleaning and required mask wearing.

 ?? Post-Gazette ?? Students from the Baldwin-Whitehall School District attend a screening at AMC Loews at the Waterfront in West Homestead in October 2015.
Post-Gazette Students from the Baldwin-Whitehall School District attend a screening at AMC Loews at the Waterfront in West Homestead in October 2015.

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