Houston Chronicle

AMC Entertainm­ent jumps into on-demand film streaming

- By Brooks Barnes

LOS ANGELES — In a sign of just how much streaming is changing Hollywood, movie fans will soon be able to rent and buy films for viewing at home — from a movie theater chain.

AMC Entertainm­ent, the largest multiplex operator in the world, will introduce an iTunesstyl­e online video store in the United States today, said Adam Aron, AMC’s president and chief executive. The service, AMC Theaters On Demand, will offer about 2,000 films for sale or rent after their theatrical runs, just as iTunes, Amazon and other videoon-demand retailers do.

The movie theater industry has long been at odds with online video. Why trek to theaters if thousands of movies are available at the click of a button at home or on your phone? Sure, new films do not arrive on VOD until they have played in theaters for an exclusive period of about 90 days. But that “windowing” practice, many analysts believe, will become untenable as streaming services like Netflix gain clout.

Hollywood’s five biggest movie studios — Disney, Warner Bros., Universal, Sony and Paramount — have made deals with AMC for catalog and new-release movies. Although DVDs still account for billions of dollars in sales for studios, more profit now comes from digital downloads and rentals.

“For us, it’s all upside,” said Ron Sanders, president of worldwide distributi­on and home entertainm­ent at Warner. “Most of our other big digital partners are focused on multiple categories — music, books. The great thing about AMC is that movies are the whole focus.”

Films will cost roughly $3 to $5.99 to rent and $9.99 to $19.99 to buy.

Aron, who took over AMC in early 2016 after running the Starwood hotel chain, has been more willing to embrace change than many other theater executives, in part because he is not blind to his industry’s challenges. Moviegoing in North America — across the chains — has been roughly flat for years, leaving theaters to scratch for growth by charging more for tickets and concession­s, a strategy that has its limits.

“Our theater business is mature,” Aron said. “There is a highgrowth opportunit­y in this digital expansion.”

He called home entertainm­ent a “natural” extension of AMC’s core business — one designed to capitalize on the chain’s fastgrowin­g customer loyalty program, AMC Stubs, which covers more than 20 million households. He said the AMC Stubs database gave the company a marketing advantage for movie rentals and downloads.

For instance, AMC Stubs members bought about 6 million tickets to “The Lion King” over the summer. When “The Lion King” becomes available digitally Tuesday, “those people will all get a personaliz­ed message from AMC saying that they can now enjoy it at home through AMC Theaters On Demand,” said Elizabeth Frank, AMC’s chief content officer.

Some theater chains in other countries already operate on-demand divisions (Cineplex in Canada is one), but AMC is the first major exhibitor in the United States to do so.

Under Aron, AMC has worked to make theatergoi­ng more attractive. It aggressive­ly installed advanced Dolby sound and projection systems, extra-wide screens, and La-Z-Boy-style seats. AMC now serves alcohol in hundreds of its theaters. In 2017, Aron rolled out greatly expanded food menus at more than 600 theaters.

After noting the popularity of MoviePass, the now-defunct movie ticket subscripti­on service, AMC introduced its own (sustainabl­e) version; for one monthly price, AMC Stubs A-List members can see up to three movies a week.

AMC, based in Leawood, Kan., and partly owned by China’s Dalian Wanda Group, became the largest multiplex chain in the world in 2016 after going on a breathtaki­ng shopping spree. It acquired the Carmike chain in the United States and added Odeon in Britain and Nordic Theater Group in Northern Europe. As a result, AMC began carrying significan­t debt — roughly $4.7 billion, up from $1.8 billion in 2014.

Its debt load and a bumpy box office ride (attendance at AMC in the United States for the first six months of 2019 fell 3.6 percent, to about 127 million people) have made investors wary. The company’s share price was $8.95 at the close of trading on Monday, down from more than $20 a year ago.

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