Business & Tech

Regal Theatres Closing All Locations, Including 17 In Ohio

Regal is closing 17 theaters in Ohio indefinitely, according to parent company Cineworld.

Regal Cinemas will close its 543 theaters in the United States Thursday due to continued revenue losses from the coronavirus pandemic.
Regal Cinemas will close its 543 theaters in the United States Thursday due to continued revenue losses from the coronavirus pandemic. (Photo by Victor J. Blue/Getty Images)

WESTLAKE, OH — Regal Cinemas will close its 543 theaters in the United States Thursday due to continued revenue losses from the coronavirus pandemic. The chain has 17 locations in Ohio.

On Monday morning, Cineworld confirmed it would suspend operations in the United States and United Kingdom starting Thursday, Oct. 8, and there was no reopening date set.

Prolonged closures and the reluctance of motion picture companies to release new films in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic drove the move, according to Cineworld.

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"This is not a decision we made lightly, and we did everything in our power to support safe and sustainable reopenings in all of our markets — including meeting, and often exceeding, local health and safety guidelines in our theatres and working constructively with regulators and industry bodies to restore public confidence in our industry," Cineworld CEO Mooky Greidinger said in a statement.

Theaters are among the many businesses hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic. Ohio movie theaters were allowed to reopen in June.

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In Ohio, Regal operates 17 theaters:

  • Lima, Regal American Mall
  • Youngstown, Regal Cinema South
  • Westlake, Regal Crocker Park & IMAX
  • Beavercreek, Regal Fairfield Commons & RPX
  • Hudson, Regal Hudson Cinema
  • Akron, Regal Interstate Park
  • Akron, Regal Montrose Movies
  • Akron, Regal Independence
  • Medina, Regal Medina
  • Willoughby, Regal Willoughby Commons
  • Niles, Regal Boulevard Centre
  • Elyria, Regal Cobblestone Square
  • Mason, Regal Deerfield Town Center & RPX
  • North Olmsted, Regal Great Northern Mall
  • Massillon, Regal Massillon
  • Cleveland, Regal Middleburg Town Square
  • Richmond Heights, Regal Richmond Town Square

"Cineworld will continue to monitor the situation closely and will communicate any future plans to resume operations in these markets at the appropriate time, when key markets have more concrete guidance on their reopening status and, in turn, studios are able to bring their pipeline of major releases back to the big screen," Greidinger said in a statement to investors Monday.

The company reports 45,000 employees will be impacted by the suspension of operations.

Regal is the second-largest theater chain in the United States after AMC.

Its decision comes on the heels of MGM's Oct. 2 announcement it was delaying the release of its newest James Bond film, "No Time To Die," from November until April 2, 2021.
Coronavirus has also pushed back the release of dozens of movies, including expected blockbusters like "Black Widow," which was originally set for release on May 1 (now tentatively expected in theaters May 7, 2021), "Wonder Woman 1984" (moved from a June 1 release to Christmas Day) and "The Batman" (moved from June 2021 to October 2021).

Running a theater without new releases was "like a grocery shop that doesn't have vegetables, fruit, meat," Greidinger told the Wall Street Journal. "We cannot operate for a long time without a product."
— By Elizabeth Janney and Shannon Antinori

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