Los Angeles Times

Alamo movies resume in May

L.A. drafthouse will reopen with COVID precaution­s after the chain gains financing.

- By Christi Carras

Remember the Alamo Drafthouse?

The Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in downtown Los Angeles will welcome moviegoers back to its screens next month for the first time since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, the theater chain announced Thursday. Tickets for the L.A. location — set to reopen May 28 — will be available for purchase starting midMay.

In March, the beloved movie exhibitor and craftbeer vendor filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection because of the public health crisis, striking a deal to stabilize itself that included $20 million in debtor-in-possession financing.

“In August of 2020, our teams began slowly and methodical­ly reopening theaters all over the country — and I do mean slowwwwly,” an announceme­nt on the Alamo Drafthouse website reads.

“It’s a lot of (expensive) work to wake one of these babies up — considerab­ly more than a little bit of dusting — so that’s why we’ve been slow to reopen locations in 2021. That’s about to change.”

In addition to L.A., Alamo Drafthouse theaters in Brooklyn, N.Y.; Austin, Texas; Denver and other cities across the country will resume operations in the coming months. The company’s only other California cinema, in San Francisco, will return in July.

“Many of our locations around the country have been open since early September (remember when TENET opened fifteen years ago?),” the Alamo Drafthouse site reads.

“We’ve spent that time refining our approach to COVID-19 safety, with health and safety standards and procedures based on CDC guidelines, consultati­ons with local health officials, and the feedback of our guests and team members. We have and will continue to modify those guidelines based only on science and common sense.”

The Alamo Drafthouse’s post-pandemic guidelines include social distancing, wearing a mask except when eating or drinking (“Duh.”), regular handwashin­g, and exiting screening rooms in “an orderly fashion” to avoid crowding.

“You know the drill,” the site reads.

The establishm­ent also encouraged moviegoers to stay home if they feel sick and promised to fully refund their tickets in the event of illness. Inside the screening rooms, “buffer seats” will remain empty to separate parties, “and you better believe there’s still no talking and no texting during the movie.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States