Movies are back, but attending them is looking different — and probably will for months to come.
Masked patrons, gloved-and-masked employees, sanitizer stations and other accommodations to COVID-19 have changed the cineplex. Things won't return to normal at least until there's a vaccine. Will the movies be able to stay in business that long, especially with Minnesota currently limiting theaters to 25% capacity?
"I think there's going to be a new normal," said Steve Mann, president of Mann Theatres, which has eight venues in Minnesota. "I wouldn't say we're doing fine but we're not going out of business."
Solstice Studios president and CEO Mark Gill is bullish. He bet on moviegoer readiness by releasing "Unhinged" last weekend, grossing $4 million — decent, considering that more than half the nation's theaters remain closed.
"We conducted polls — in May, asking about July — and what surprised us was 80% of moviegoers said they'd go," said Gill. "The No. 1 thing they cited is the safety protocols and the requirement for masks, so you can see the populace getting better educated about how to stay healthy."
A major factor in the release of "Unhinged" was the return of the world's largest movie theater chain, AMC. Its fortunes will be closely watched, since it was in financial straits even before COVID-19 shut it down.
On the other end of the spectrum are small theaters across the country, and single-screen spots such as the Riverview Theater and Trylon Cinema in Minneapolis. Trylon programmer John Moret thinks a government program is needed, along the lines of Sen. Amy Klobuchar's Save Our Stages bill for live venues. Meanwhile, the Trylon is doing OK.
"We'll be fine," said Barry Kryshka, director of the Trylon, which reopened in July and had built up a reserve fund to get it through the next several months. This is not the first movie death knell he's heard.