AMC
AMC Theatres beat Wall Street expectations, reporting fourth-quarter revenue of $1.10 billion, up from $990.9 million in 2022 and a net loss of $182 million, compared to a net loss of $287.7 million in 2022.
For the full year, the theater chain reported total revenue of $4.8 billion, up from $3.9 billion in 2022. Net loss improved to $396.6 million, up $577 million from a year earlier.
AMC Theater CEO Adam Aron said that “literally all” of the increase in revenue in the fourth quarter was driven by Taylor Swift and Beyoncé. Total attendance in the fourth-quarter grew to 51.9 million, up 4.7% from a year ago.
“What is particularly noteworthy is how much AMC benefited from our trailblazing industry leading efforts with our highly successful distribution of two concert movies Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour and Renaissance: A Film By Beyoncé,” Aron wrote in the press release. “Despite a diminished box office overall, in the fourth quarter compared to the same quarter a year ago, AMC’s revenue grew by 11.5 percent and AMC’s adjusted EBITDA almost tripled. Literally, all of that increase in AMC’s Revenue and EBITDA is attributable to our having shown these two movies in our theatres in the U.S. and internationally.”
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On the earnings call, AMC Theatres management said it is introducing a new version of its Nicole Kidman commercial.”
“Before every movie starts, and starting March 1, we’re going to show three different, 30-second Nicole Kidman commercials before the movie starts on a rotating basis,” Aron said.
A spokesperson later clarified that the spots are not “new ads or sequels” but “never-before-seen-in-theatres versions of the original, iconic ad.”
Aron said the company’s “phones have been ringing off the hook” with requests from musical artists and that the theater chain will have more concert movies “later in 2024 and/or 2025.”
Aside from these two films, fourth-quarter domestic industry-wide box office was down 35% versus 2019, as the industry continues to deal with lingering impact from the dual strikes. Still, Aaron said he believes the strike impacts will starts to ease up this spring.
“AMC believes that the box office will start to strengthen again as soon as this coming month of March, in some of the summer months and especially in the latter third of this year. And over the medium term, we are both bullish and optimistic. With all the caveats that no one’s crystal ball is perfect, we currently expect that the industry box office in 2025 will grow by $1 to $2 billion, or more, in size over 2024,” he said.
Due to the impact from the strikes, which Aron reiterated he believes is “temporary,” AMC has “tightened” its operating hours, cut costs, “right-sized” its theater portfolio, as in adding two new high performing theaters and closing nine underperforming locations, and “pushed the innovation envelope in merchandise and food & beverage sales,” Aaron wrote. Part of off-setting the strike impact was also establishing a new revenue stream through the distribution of concert movies.
The company also conducted several stock exchange agreements at the end of 2023 to pay down some of its debt. In the full year 2023, AMC reduced the principal balance of its debt by $448.1 million.
“Given AMC’s proven ability to thread the needle in coping with one Herculean challenge after another, we are confident in our company’s future,” Aron said.
Still, during the call, Aron addressed the pain he believes is felt by his retail shareholders noting that “it was not a good year” for them. He added that he is a shareholder in the company too and has also felt their pain, but will now be taking an added step.
Last week, Aron said he recommended to the AMC Board of Directors that for 12 months, starting now, his target compensation be reduced by 25% versus the previous year’s target.
“I am a shareholder. I am holding. I’m not selling. I ride with you,” Aron said. “So when you do well financially with AMC, I will too. But if you’re hurting from that investment, I believe that I too, should be hurting with you as well.”
At the end of the call, Aron addressed the retail investors who have helped prop up the stock, noting that “it was not a good year,” for them, and to whom he said he had promised “straight talk” on what’s happening at AMC.
He said he also wanted to address the “garbage information floating around Twitter, YouTube and other corners of the internet about AMC,” including the “hubbub and litigation” that surrounded AMC and the Delaware Courts in 2023 and further dilution of their shares by selling preferred equity units in Aug 2022 or APES. The cash from these sales was necessary to keep the cash afloat, he argued.
“We did, in dilution, what was absolutely vital for your company to do to get through the many challenges that were thrown our way,” he said.
He also addressed a conspiracy theory about the management team at AMC.
“It’s disappointing how many people out there typing into their Twitter feeds that the management team at AMC is somehow actively working against the interests of our real retail shareholders, and standing nefariously on the side of evil,” Aron said, pointing to this quarter’s results.
“One doesn’t launch popcorn to the home, or blaze new trails with innovative concept movies that have been incredibly profitable and reputationally enhancing for AMC, if one is trying to undermine our company’s success,” he added.
Still, even after that outreach, the stock continued falling 9 percent after the call Wednesday.
This article was originally published by The Hollywood Reporter.
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Source: AMC / The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live
Our favorite zombie apocalypse couple, Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) and Michonne (Danai Gurira), are back in the first trailer for the new limited series, The Walking Dead: Ones Who Live.
The Walking Dead has been on television screens since 2010, had 11 seasons, and is showing no signs of slowing up thanks to a plethora of spinoffs.
*Spoiler alert for those who may have checked out of The Walking Dead*
Initially set to be a theatrical release, TWD fans got their first good look at the upcoming limited series, The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live, which sees the long-awaited return of Richonne, the ship nickname given to Rick Grimes and his katana sword-wielding boo Michonne.
The show will see Michonne on her mission to desperately find Rick while he is forced to work for the CRM (Civic Republic Military), who found and kidnapped Rick after barely surviving the bridge explosion.
Rick Grimes left in season 9 after bravely sacrificing himself to save the community from a herd of walkers by blowing a bridge. He was dead by many of his friends, including the mother of his son and stepmother, his daughter Judith.
We first met the CRM during the two-season series The Walking Dead: World Beyond, one of the many spinoffs from the long-running original franchise that finally ended in 2022.
The official synopsis for the show reads:
The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live presents an epic love story of two characters changed by a changed world. Kept apart by distance. By an unstoppable power. By the ghosts of who they were. Rick and Michonne are thrown into another world, built on a war against the dead… And ultimately, a war against the living. Can they find each other and who they were in a place and situation unlike any they’ve ever known before? Are they enemies? Lovers? Victims? Victors? Without each other, are they even alive — or will they find that they, too, are the Walking Dead?
The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live is executive produced by showrunner Scott M. Gimple; Gurira, Lincoln Denise Huth, and Brian Bockrath also serve as producers.
The limited series premieres Feb. 25 on AMC and AMC+. Peep the trailer below.
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Photo: AMC / The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live
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Source: Penske Media / Getty / AMC
AMC might be putting on a masterclass in self-sabotage with the announcement of its new ticket pricing system.
On Monday afternoon, AMC revealed that its Sightline initiative would set its ticket price based on where you enjoy your movie-watching experience. It will likely lead to battles for that highly coveted middle section.
Per NPR:
Seats on the front row are considered Value Sightline seats and cost less, while seats in the middle are called Preferred Sightline seats and will cost more. The remaining parts of the theater are Standard Sightline seats and will cost the price of a standard admission ticket.
Those who are members of AMC Stubs A-List, the top tier of the company’s reward program, can select Preferred Sightline seats for no extra cost.
If you cop movie tickets after 4 pm, Sightline-prices will be applied. However, the new initiative will not apply to AMC’s $5 Discount Tuesdays.
This heada** pricing structure is already available in select markets, with AMC set to introduce it at all movie locations at the end of the year.
“Sightline at AMC more closely aligns AMC’s seat pricing approach to that of many other entertainment venues, offering experienced-based pricing and another way for moviegoers to find value at the movies,” Executive Vice President Eliot Hamlisch said.
As Expected No One Likes AMC’s New Ticket Pricing Initiative
The initiative isn’t going over well with customers and even those in Hollywood. Actor Elijah Wood, best known for his role as Frodo Baggins in The Lord of The Rings trilogy, pointed out AMC’s new system would punish lower-income movie fans.
We shall see if AMC will continue with this new pricing initiative or have an about-face after it will most likely flop. You can see more reactions in the gallery below.
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Photo: Penske Media / Getty
3. Accurate
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Source: AMC Networks / 61st Street
Watching television continues to be a complicated mess because a show you invest in can quickly end up on the chopping block. 61st Street is one of those shows.
Spotted on Deadline via Variety, AMC Networks announced it would not renew Michael B. Jordan’s and Peter Moffat’s drama 61st Street, starring Courtney B. Vance, Aunjanue Ellis, and Tosin Cole, along with Invitation to a Bonfire.
Both shows have become the latest victims of Hollywood’s mission to cut costs. 61st Street’s cancellation hurts because it will leave its fans hanging the most.
Per Deadline:
AMC Networks has scrapped both shows after revealing that it would take around $400M of content write downs. They form part of the company’s one-time write-off last year.
The second season of 61st Street, which stars Courtney B. Vance and comes from Peter Moffat and Michael B. Jordan, had been filmed. It was originally ordered as part of a two-season pick up.
The report also notes that in a recent 8K, one of those shows could find renewed life on another network. It would be a safe bet to assume that 61st Street could be that show because it was only supposed to be two seasons long, and all of the remaining episodes were shot.
Welp.
We’re going to hold onto hope. 61st Street deserves to reach its conclusion. It’s a tense legal drama that follows Moses Johnson (Cole), a promising young athlete who unfortunately gets swept up in Chicago’s criminal justice system after he is mistaken to be a gang member following an arrest where a police officer dies during a drug bust gone wrong.
Vance, who also serves as an executive producer on the show, plays Johnson’s attorney Franklin Roberts.
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Photo: AMC Networks / 61st Street
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