Thousands of US Theatres are Offering $3 Movie Tickets Today (upi.com) 79
"Every movie, every showtime, every format — $3.00" announces the web site for America's "National Cinema Day."
UPI explains: While not all theaters will be participating in the day, most major American chains, including AMC, Regal, Cinemark and Marcus are all taking part.... In addition to major cinema chains, dozens of independent, small and art-house theaters will be offering $3 tickets as well. Vox noted that the day should be busy, considering that a large chunk of the film industry has recovered from COVID-19. The outlet reported that total domestic ticket sales this summer exceeded $3 billion — though this is still an estimated 20% less than summer 2019.
More details from CNBC: Jackie Brenneman, president of the nonprofit Cinema Foundation, tells CNBC Make It that the idea for a national movie theater holiday was in the works well before 2020, but that the Covid-19 pandemic forced those plans to be postponed.
After Regal Cinemas parent company Cineworld held a similar event in the UK in February to great success, Brenneman said planning began in earnest to replicate the promotion across the pond. "It gave a model template for how we could do something at that scale in the United States," she says....
The flat $3 price for any movie in any format is also meant to encourage moviegoers to check out premium formats such as Dolby and IMAX. "It's an opportunity to get people to try out the new technologies and see how they like it," Brenneman says....
There are thus far no plans in place to repeat National Cinema Day next year, but Brenneman says the hope is this won't be a one-off event.
UPI explains: While not all theaters will be participating in the day, most major American chains, including AMC, Regal, Cinemark and Marcus are all taking part.... In addition to major cinema chains, dozens of independent, small and art-house theaters will be offering $3 tickets as well. Vox noted that the day should be busy, considering that a large chunk of the film industry has recovered from COVID-19. The outlet reported that total domestic ticket sales this summer exceeded $3 billion — though this is still an estimated 20% less than summer 2019.
More details from CNBC: Jackie Brenneman, president of the nonprofit Cinema Foundation, tells CNBC Make It that the idea for a national movie theater holiday was in the works well before 2020, but that the Covid-19 pandemic forced those plans to be postponed.
After Regal Cinemas parent company Cineworld held a similar event in the UK in February to great success, Brenneman said planning began in earnest to replicate the promotion across the pond. "It gave a model template for how we could do something at that scale in the United States," she says....
The flat $3 price for any movie in any format is also meant to encourage moviegoers to check out premium formats such as Dolby and IMAX. "It's an opportunity to get people to try out the new technologies and see how they like it," Brenneman says....
There are thus far no plans in place to repeat National Cinema Day next year, but Brenneman says the hope is this won't be a one-off event.
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I don't know. Theaters are usually for action movies. And there are plenty out that are good. Spiderman's good, Top Gun's good, Thor's good, Bullet Train's good. I heard Rrr is interesting even though it doesn't play around me.
If you like better movies that make you think. Nope would do that.
Maybe you just don't like movies!
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Thor sucked. Big time.
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A lot of theaters around here are still showing "Top Gun: Maverick". I didn't love it, but it's worth $3 and is definitely not woke propaganda. A bunch are also showing "Spider-Man: No Way Home" if that's more your speed. Otherwise... well, the IMAX probably has some documentaries.
Re:Still too much (Score:4, Insightful)
A lot of theaters around here are still showing "Top Gun: Maverick". I didn't love it, but it's worth $3 and is definitely not woke propaganda.
Right, it's American Imperialist propaganda.
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... well, the IMAX probably has some documentaries.
If only! All of the local IMAX/3D screens are showing Jaws 3D (re-issue) https://www.regmovies.com/movi... [regmovies.com] (release date, yesterday)
At least I'd consider it had it been Avatar 3D (that's releasing end of Sept) but Jaws? Meh.
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meh
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Re: Still too much (Score:1)
Re: Still too much (Score:2, Funny)
First we have to have a struggle session with the doll to determine its pronouns for the day.
And covid (Score:5, Interesting)
But hey, I'm sure this will drown up a lot of interest in movies. And it's not like we have 480 people a day dying
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As someone who's lost someone to covid, FUCK YOU.
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Welcome to Slashdot.
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I get that a lot of us are old and bitter and angry but this is a bit much. We need to dial that anger back or channel it into something a bit more constructive.
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A percentage of mods are trolls. Right now trolls are gonna troll with maga stuff because that's the hot issue, and because it's so easy to make the trolling look plausible because so many maga types are such fruit loops. Also, those wingnuts have become emboldened, as the phrase goes, which is absolutely true. Slashdot has always had a strong segment of hardcore gimme-mine libertarians, and of equally self-centered republicans who are also often the flames-of-hell types. They're just feeling their oats bec
Re: And covid (Score:1)
What world do you live in where the right is in control?
I want to live in that world too...
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What world do you live in where the right is in control?
Fascism is not a liberal value, but most supposed left-wingers in congress are as committed to permitting corporations to rule us as as the self-professed conservatives.
Re: And covid (Score:1)
It's always been understood that a unified power structure is more dangerous to freedom and prosperity than a diffuse and adversarial cohort of power centers.
Checks and balances in government, competition among many actors in business, adversarial procedures in the courts. No one institution or one man can fuck you over by himself for shits and giggles.
The Chinese used to say that the emperor is powerful, but far away, in a related idea.
Dems talk a good game about going after monopolies and oligarchs, but t
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Handmaids tale scares me slightly less* than Mao freaks in power telling me there's no such thing as gender and demanding I use their made-up pronouns.
That's because you're a nutjob. There's no freedom for you under such a system either, no matter what you might imagine.
Re: And covid (Score:1)
I imagine if it came to pass like on the TV, you'd be one of the fools coming to a gun fight with a paper protest sign.
The fact that you seem to treat handmaids tale as a real possibility makes me quite confident in that hypothetical prediction.
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I imagine if it came to pass like on the TV, you'd be one of the fools coming to a gun fight with a paper protest sign.
You're not short on imagination, only intellect.
The fact that you seem to treat handmaids tale as a real possibility makes me quite confident in that hypothetical prediction.
That's literally what the evangelicals running the supremes want. Look at the cult ACB is in and tell me I'm wrong. They literally call the women handmaids and require them to be subservient. We've literally now got a supreme court justice who has to ask a man what her opinion is.
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Someone with a sense of humour.
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As someone who's lost someone to covid, FUCK YOU.
As someone ELSE that's lost someone to Covid... get over it. RWNJ's point stands. The vast, vast majority of people that died from Covid would have died from the Flu or some other ailment that plagues the elderly.
You don't know that (Score:3)
Your side was ready the bomb two countries into the Stone age and kill tens of millions over a single 9/11. Funny how you got silent when it became cl
Re: You don't know that (Score:1)
No I don't know. But I can infer. And my powers of inference tell me that getting worked up about something that kills people at the end of their natural lives, as opposed to the beginning or prime, is...incongruous with reality.
For me it was half a day on the couch. For my 97 yo grandfather it was a nasty cough for a few days. For his unvaxxed home health aid who gave it to him, it was a trip to the hospital, and for a good friend of the family in his late 60s it was unfortunately the end in 2020. Facts on
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And my powers of inference tell me that getting worked up about something that kills people at the end of their natural lives, as opposed to the beginning or prime, is...incongruous with reality.
Your powers of inference are weak. It's still killing people of all ages, though it does mostly kill the elderly. But it also is causing long-term health effects we've barely begun to understand.
For me it was half a day on the couch. For my 97 yo grandfather it was a nasty cough for a few days.
It's not over. Covid's still mutating... largely because so many people have it.
Re: You don't know that (Score:1)
No it isn't killing people of all ages. Or more precisely, not enough to get worked up about.
In fact, I'll say it again: there is such a thing as an acceptable level of death. 40k a year die on the roads. 100k+ a year drink or pillpop themselves to death. 30k blow their own brains out.
The for-your-own-safety surveillance state necessary to put a dent in any of those is the stuff that sets off violent revolutions if imposed on free people. Covid joins that list: in almost every way that matters, if you have
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The people dying "from" covid in liberal Massachusetts are pushing 80.
We ALL die, fuckstick, your ideology about liberals and retarded republicans dont matter.
The manner in which we live and treat others, is what is important.
but since you are a moron asshat with some stick up their ass about "liberal" Massachusetts, thanks for your display of ignorant intolerance.
Re:And covid (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, and increasing. You can see a recent post of mine from my history - there were 3K/day deaths in February (U.S only). We're slowly starting to trend back up as fall starts. Only 37% of people ever got a booster, like 20% never got any vaccine at at all - this is where all the variants are coming from.
Packed theaters aren't like they were before cellphones anyway, it's mostly (not always but rare enough to not be worth the chance) fucking miserable now with oblivious selfish fucks on their phones, not an awesome shared experience - and that's assuming the movie was worth going to to begin with.
Just watching people walking around my neighborhood there are noticeably more people with loud, deep, hacking coughs (who don't bother covering their mouths, naturally) wandering around.
No, thanks.
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"And it's not like we have 480 people a day dying.", A.K.A. "480p".
Wait, what?
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It's not that we object to your being concerned about dying from covid, it's that you consistently fail to put that risk into context of other risks. You can:
- Get in a car accident on the way to the movies, and die
- Have a heart attack during the movie, and die
- Trip and fall in the movie theater, and die
- Get trapped in a fire in the movie theater, and die
etc.
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It's not that we object to you being an asshole, it's that you consistently fail to put your narcissism into the context of psychopathic indifference to the lives of others. You can:
- Get help
- Shut the fuck up
- Learn to be a decent human being
- Keep crying about how nobody cares what the fuck you think
etc.
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Don't forget the free covid.
You won't get COVID in a cinema. Experts on Slashdot have unequivocally declared that anyone going to the cinema will be doing so alone because the cinema is dead. So you're in an empty room. The same experts also say you shouldn't go because of all the noise and people throwing popcorn at you, but I'm still having a super computer figure out how those two conditions can exist concurrently unless the cinema is haunted by dead young arseholes, throwing ghost popcorn.
Buncha Bitter Betties (Score:2)
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I love the idea, they just forgot to mention it runs as a yearly event for a long time in some countries. The most viewed movie in France's 1985 inaugural edition was Woody Allen's "The Purple Rose of Cairo"; the most viewed at this year's 37th edition (3.5 euro ticket) was "Top Gun : Maverick".
Re: Buncha Bitter Betties (Score:1)
Pretty much. It's why I almost never even comment on anything.
I think this is amazing, just wish it would have showed up in the news with more than 0 days notice. Maybe I'll know to look for next year?
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Yeah I'm hoping they bring it back next year, too. Already had plans today so I won't catch any shows, but it could make for a fun day, especially if they include more classics then make it a double-feature of something old and new.
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Seems like most commenters on /. try really hard to be unimpressed by everything.
Pedantic cynicism is a Slashdot tradition. What's funny is that back in the day, many of these people would passionately argue about something really minor in tech, like how Vi was superior to Emacs, or vice-versa. I mean they'd get nasty about it. But popular movies? Pfft, be silent, bourgeois proletarian.
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I'll wait for them on streaming. Nothing could convince me to be in a theater.
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Love this $3 movie idea and hope it helps renew some interest in the theatrical experience.
I love the 3 bucks, too, what I hate is the theatrical experience. You know the kind. You gotta get a babysitter who will turn up late, then you hurry to the movies. Through the afternoon traffic jam because for some reason everyone's going to the mall where the movie theater is. You stand in line for the tickets you reserved and already paid for because there's a group (or worse, family) in front of you who just can't figure out what movie to watch but it's their turn now and they won't let you just go and
National get Covid day (Score:2)
Theaters? Yuck.
But still serving 10 cents worth of popcorn for... (Score:2)
...8 bucks, so it they had a smart business model, they'd be GIVING away movie tickets to raise the concession revenues.
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It's almost like the movie theaters are run by Epson and Canon now. And soda is the new printer ink.
Not clear the market is really there (Score:4, Interesting)
I think pre-covid people kept going to theaters out of habit, but its not clear that they provide much benefit today. Theaters are going to have to think very hard about their market. $3 tickets suggests that they may be aiming for the low end of the market - people who can't afford home theaters or streaming services. That may be a reasonable approach - its not clear that there is any way for them to recapture the high end of the market.
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According to analysts, it won't be until next summer that the movie theater pipelines will be chockful of FOMO flix for audiences to see before waiting 30-/60-/90-days for distrib
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It's funny listening to the people who don't find value in going to the theater trying to rationalize how no one should find value. "I think pre-covid people kept going to theaters out of habit" sure because those who see value in the theater are just sheep but you know better!
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Well theater attendance is already rapidly reaching pre covid numbers despite the fact that Covid is still a thing and the shit movies out right now. This summer looks to be just 12% below 2019's summer https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/1... [cnbc.com] .
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Yup. Growing up we had a black and white TV for a long time. The first time I saw anything in color was when my older brother took me to see PT 109 in 1963. I was impressed! lol
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[$3 ticket] may be a reasonable approach - its not clear that there is any way for them to recapture the high end of the market.
near me, there are "luxury cinemas" for ~$20+ a ticket that include power-reclining leather chairs that rumble with the sound, have full bars + food w/ waiters, dolby atmos w/ way more physical speakers than you have at home, extra large screens, etc.
all in all, not a terrible way to watch a movie.
feels like more of an "event" than watching it at home.
If you go to the movies, please, please remember (Score:2)
Please remember that a movie theater is not like your home TV room. If you talk through the movie, it annoys the living daylights out of the rest of us.
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Like the old double act joke "I go to the movies so I can join in the conversation about it." "Doesn't that bother the others watching it?"
Back in the 60s, this was a joke. Today, it's a reality. Weird that people back then knew how to behave in society. Maybe because being a total selfish jerk wasn't mainstream.
Still not worth it (Score:2)
Desperation - outdated (Score:2)
The pandemic sped up a lot of change - working from home for instance.
I guess public experiences like Cinemas are also seeing the same accelerated change.
Ticket sales were already down before the pandemic.
TV's now, have reached the point where a large set with reasonable quality picture and audio, is a comparable experience to "the big screen".
Better still, you get to choose what you watch, when you want to. You can pause for a break when you want to. You don't have to sit through 30 minutes of adverts.
You
$3 movie No Thanks (Score:2)
Lower soda and popcorn prices to match (Score:2)
And then a lot more people might visit.
The memory of getting gouged for a liter of colored water with ice, and a scoop of corn that had been popped, is something that lingers in people's memories and adds to their hesitation in going to the theater.
Granted, the theater makes virtually nothing from ticket sales, so their maintenance costs and a bit of profit have to come from somewhere.
P.S. I assumed a lot of people still bring their own candy.