Stranger Things, Netflix and The Upside Down Show
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The theatre chain is cutting back on pre-show marketing. AMC Theatres’ CEO Adam Aron announced during an earnings call on Monday that the company would be cutting ...
AMC Theatres is paying tribute to actress Diane Keaton by rereleasing two of her most iconic movies to the big screen. The movie theater chain will bring back the 1977 comedy “Annie Hall,” which Keaton won an Academy Award for as well as the 2003 classic “Something’s Gotta Give.
Repairs are underway at Rockford’s movie theater after the building was hit by lightning, a company spokesperson confirms.
AMC Theatres will offer the experience tonight, Monday, Oct. 20, when its Screen Unseen series becomes Scream Unseen in honor of the Halloween season. For $6, moviegoers can see a surprise horror movie that is yet to be released. All we know is that it’s rated R, and the runtime is 106 minutes.
Directed by Woody Allen, “Annie Hall” became Keaton’s biggest claim to fame, winning her the Oscar for Best Actress for her performance as the titular Annie Hall, a woman with whom comedian Alvy Singer, played by Allen, has a relationship that ends up going nowhere but leads Alvy to contemplate the necessity of human romance.
Moving forward, AMC will probably have to compromise on theatrical windows less extensive than the 90-day period it fought for with The Irishman in 2019. But Sarandos can obviously stand to soften his own hardline streaming stance,
The first Dolby Cinema experience in Gwinnett County in eight years opened in the Lawrenceville and Snellville area this past weekend.
U.S. District Court Judge Terrence Boyle on Tuesday denied AMC's request to dismiss the lawsuit, which was filed in 2024 in the Eastern District of North Carolina.