AMC Theatres
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For other uses see AMC
| AMC Entertainment Inc. | |
|---|---|
| Type | Private |
| Founded | 1920 in Kansas City, Missouri |
| Headquarters | 920 Main Street Kansas City, Missouri 64105 |
| Key people | Edward Durwood, Founder Peter C. Brown, CEO |
| Industry | Entertainment (movie theatres) |
| Products | AMC Theatres |
| Revenue | ▲ $2.5 billion (FY 2007) |
| Net income | ▲ $134 million (FY 2007) |
| Employees | 21,000 |
| Website | www.amctheatres.com |
AMC Theatres, officially known as AMC Entertainment Inc., is the second largest movie theatre chain in North America and one of only three (National Amusements, Inc. Dedham, Ma. & Cinemark Theaters being the others) of the 12 largest on the continent that did not go bankrupt during the 2001-2002 recession,[1] due in part to the fact that its theatres often dominate lists of the top 50 most profitable theatres in North America.[2] Its mascot is the animated filmstrip Clip who has starred in the pre-show policy trailers since 1991.
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[edit] History
The company was founded in 1920 by the Dubinsky Brothers (Maurice, Edward and Barney) who had been traveling the Midwest performing melodramas and tent shows with actress Jeanne Eagels. They purchased the Regent Theatre on 12th Street between Walnut and Grand in downtown Kansas City, Missouri.[3]
The Dubinskys eventually changed their name to Durwood and the company was called Durwood Theatres.
In 1961 Edward's son Stanley took control of Durwood Theatres when his father died. Stanley had attended Harvard University and served as a navigator in the U.S. Air Force during World War II.
He renamed Durwood Theatres to "American Multi-Cinema, Inc.", and began to apply military management and the insights of management science to revolutionize the movie theatre industry.[4] As he later explained to Variety, "We needed to define what our company was doing in the (exhibition) business. My dad wasn't that organized."[5]
It was founded on the belief that every "guest" (as AMC calls them) was to be treated first.
In 1963, AMC opened the two-screen Parkway Twin in a shopping center on Kansas City's Ward Parkway. Durwood later claimed that "in 1962 he was standing in the lobby of his 600-seat Roxy in Kansas City mulling over its poor grosses when he realized he could double his box office by adding a second screen and still operate with the same size staff."[6] This insight arises from the fact that the real-time labor demands of a movie theatre are not constant. Rather, they come in bursts at the start and end of the movie. At the start, a large number of employees have to sell tickets, process tickets at an access point, sell food at the concession stand (a theatre's primary profit center), make sure the theatre is not overcrowded, and run the film projector. While the movie plays, a small number of employees are needed for security and access control, while the others are relatively idle, allowing them to restock concession items, clean restrooms, and clean the lobby. At the end of the movie, a number of employees are needed to clean the theatre for the next showing. When the start times for movie showings in several physically connected auditoriums are staggered correctly, one team can continually keep all of them operational with minimal downtime. An additional advantage is that a different movie can be shown in each auditorium, which increases the choices available at a theatre's box office at any given time, and minimizes the possibility that disappointed moviegoers will take their business to a different theatre altogether.[7]
In retrospect, Durwood's idea seems simple, but it took a lot of trial and error to get the bugs out. For example, when the Parkway Twin opened, both screens were showing the same movie, The Great Escape.[8] Next, Durwood followed up on the Parkway Twin with a four-screen theatre in 1966 and a six-screen theatre in 1969.
AMC pioneered the first North American megaplex[citation needed] when it opened the AMC Grand 24 in Dallas, Texas in 1995, though the first megaplex in the world had been built by European chain Kinepolis in 1988. AMC has continued to open megaplex theatres and now operates the busiest theatre in the country[citation needed] at the AMC Empire 25 theatre in New York City, New York, located in Times Square.
In 1997 AMC formed a joint partnership with Planet Hollywood to develop Planet Movies by AMC.
In the 1980s, AMC built and operated a number of multiplex ten-screen cinemas in the UK, including sites at locations such as Dudley and Tamworth. These were subsequently bought and taken over by UCI. In January 2002, the 16-screen Great Northern was opened in Manchester, which was later supplemented by the opening of a 12-screen cinema on the Broadway Plaza site in Birmingham in October 2003. United Kingdom outlets serve a dual function, they also cater to business conferences and companies can display spreadsheets and other things through a projector onto the cinema screen, this is in addition to the normal cinema functions.
[edit] Innovating the cinema
AMC has been a major innovator in terms of raising industry standards for customer comfort; it invented the cupholder armrest[citation needed] and reintroduced the construction of theatres with stadium-style seating[citation needed], where the seats are placed on risers so that each person has an unobstructed view of the screen. Both these items have become standard for nearly all new theatres. The early versions of stadium-style seating, which were part sloped floor and part stadium-style seating, made AMC a popular target for ADA lawsuits, as the stairs to the risers made it impossible for wheelchair-bound patron to sit in the stadium section, except in larger auditoriums. AMC solved the problem with full-stadium theatres, has appealed the litigation to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals and continues to evaluate seating options. Remodeling of its older part slope floor, part stadium-style auditoriums will depend on the ruling by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.
[edit] MovieWatcher Program
They also created the innovative MovieWatcher program that rewards frequent movie-goers.
AMC has also had some endeavors that didn't prove as viable, such as experimenting with 16 mm film for projection and selling microwave popcorn at concession stands through a small test in the South several years ago[6]. They also stumbled by agreeing to install the Sony Dynamic Digital Sound system in all their new locations, rather than the more popular Dolby Digital or DTS systems. While the majority of major releases have all three digital tracks, including SDDS, most independent and smaller-budgets films only have Dolby Digital tracks, leaving many films in AMC's otherwise ultra-modern megaplexes showing films in analog sound. Recently, AMC has begun installing Dolby Digital in all new auditoriums, and in 2003 began upgrading selected older auditoriums.
[edit] Acquisitions
AMC has been successful in integrating competitive theater circuits into its family. In March 2002, AMC bought General Cinemas Companies Inc., which added 621 screens to the company assets as well as Gulf States Theaters which had 68 screens in the greater New Orleans area. In late 2003, AMC acquired MegaStar Theatres, adding top-quality assets to its Atlanta and Minneapolis-St. Paul markets. Then on January 26, 2006, AMC merged with Loews Cineplex Entertainment; AMC was the winner in the merger and the newly merged company continued with the name AMC Entertainment Inc.
The company has interests in 358 theaters with 5,128 screens in six countries. Some of the U.S. theatres are named for basketball legend and businessman Earvin "Magic" Johnson, who became a partner of Loews in the mid-1990s.
The company has theaters mostly in the United States, followed by Canada, Mexico, Europe (UK, Germany, France), and Asia (China, Japan).
The company's flagship theatre is AMC Century City 15 in Los Angeles.[citation needed]
[edit] Sale to Investment Partnership
In 2004, the company which at the time publicly traded on AMEX under the code AEN was acquired by Marquee Holdings Inc. Marquee is an investment vehicle controlled by affiliates of J.P. Morgan Partners, LLC, the private equity arm of JPMorgan Chase, and Apollo Management, a private investment firm.[9] The company continues to officially be headquartered in Kansas City although it has sold its headquarters building at Tenmain Center where it now leases space.[10]
In 2006, the company announced a new IPO expected to be worth approximately $789 million, however, adverse market conditions convinced the company's management to withdraw from such an offering on May 3, 2007.
[edit] References
- ^ Kathryn Harris, "AMC on Firm Footing as Others Stumble," Los Angeles Business Journal 23, no. 4 (Jan. 22, 2001): 14.
- ^ M. Doman, "AMC 3rd-quarter revenue up," Hollywood Reporter 366, no. 35 (Jan. 25, 2001): 6.
- ^ The Dubinsky Brothers - Kansas City Public Library - Retrieved March 21, 2008
- ^ La Franco, Robert. "Coming soon: a megaplex near you." Forbes, 12 August 1996, p. 133.
- ^ Anonymous. "Durwood legacy packs 'em in." Variety, 16 March 1998, p. 42.
- ^ a b Klady, Leonard. "Obituaries: Stanley Durwood." Variety, 19 July 1999, p. 40.
- ^ Nan Robertson, "Multiplexes Add 2,300 Movie Screens in 5 Years," New York Times, 7 November 1983, C13.
- ^ Anonymous, "Stan Durwood: Multiplex Theater Pioneer," Los Angeles Times, 16 July 1999, A22.
- ^ Acquisition of AMC Entertainment by Affiliates of J.P. Morgan Partners and Apollo Management is Completed - amctheatres.com - December 23, 2004
- ^ HQ Building For AMC Sells - Kansas City Business Journal - December 16-22, 2005
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
| Major Cinema Chains in the United Kingdom |
|---|
| AMC - Apollo - Cineworld - Empire - Odeon |
| Picturehouse - Showcase - Vue - Ward Anderson |

