STAMFORD, Conn. ā With the previews about to start, a trickle of masked moviegoers made their way into one of the first U.S. screenings of āTenetā at the Bow Tie Majestic 6 in downtown Stamford, Connecticut. They took their seats Tuesday night, eyeing the empty seats between each other and a little giddy at being back at the movies for the first time in many months.
Philip Scarante and Andy Flores, both 25, went every Tuesday religiously before theaters closed in March. āItās just our thing,ā Scarante said. Seeing Nolanās latest mind-bending spectacle later on a smaller screen held no appeal. They sat down in center seats, up close.
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āEveryone seems to have a mask on,ā Scarante noted, looking around in the sparsely populated theater. āI didnāt expect that many people to show up.ā
More Americans will make their way back to the movies this weekend than any since the pandemic shuttered theaters in March. After a few weeks of catalog films and minor releases, the $200 million āTenetā is the first must-see main event of the pandemic, a mega-movie litmus test for how ready U.S. moviegoers are to return to cinemas.
At the same time, another $200 million movie, the Walt Disney Co.ās live-action āMulanā remake is debuting not in theaters, as it originally intended to back in March, but on the streaming service Disney+. In an innovative, untested release, āMulanā will be available for $30 only to Disney+ subscribers Friday.
Each movie could chart a new way forward for Hollywood in the COVID-19 era, and potentially beyond. āTenet,ā w hich grossed a hefty $53.6 million in 41 international territories last weekend, could prove that blockbuster moviegoing can be resuscitated with half-capacity theaters and safety protocols -- or that people arenāt ready to sit in the dark with strangers. āMulanā could open up a new premium on-demand window to the largest film franchises -- or prove that big-time box office (āMulanā had been projected to make around $750 million in theaters) canāt be replicated in the home.
Labor Day weekend, usually among the sleepiest days of the year in theaters, has turned into a dramatic showdown with maybe the fate of the industry at stake, as two high-priced experiments test the possibilities of a new reality.
āThe world weāre in right now, the concept of releasing the film absolutely everywhere for everyone to go and see on the same weekend, clearly thatās absolutely not an option for the foreseeable future,ā said Nolan in an interview. āSo if that pushes the industry into different ways of thinking and some of them being older distribution models, that hopefully can work.ā
Warner Bros. is rolling out āTenetā where they can. After debuting in Europe, Canada and Korea last weekend, āTenetā on Thursday lands in the 75% open U.S. theaters, along with cinemas in China on Friday. Some states, like New York, have kept theaters closed, though more are coming online just in time for āTenet.ā New Jersey and some California cinemas are to reopen Friday.
The strong international launch of āTenetā proved that many people are eager to come back. The U.S., though, may be a different story. Though COVID-19 cases and deaths are declining, they are still far more elevated than in most parts of the world. Cases are approaching six million in the U.S., with deaths surpassing 180,000. Epidemiologists, most more concerned about school re-openings, remain cautious about any large indoor gatherings.
Meanwhile exhibitors are clinging to survival. New product, theyāve said, is essential to their making it through the pandemic. Connecticutās Bow Tie Cinemas opened earlier this summer and then closed when major releases were again postponed. At the āTenetā preview screening Tuesday, the married couple Trudy and Phil Davies, with a tub of popcorn between them, said they came for āthe chance to do something different" but also to contribute to the recovery.
āWe came here to help things get back up and running,ā Trudy Davies said. āNot just for the movie businesses, for everybody. As long as itās done in a sensible way.ā
As difficult as the circumstances are, Warner Bros. also sees opportunity. āTenetā has virtually no competition in cinemas and will play continuously for not just weeks but months. It has the big screen to itself. At one Boston AMC, āTenetā is playing 86 times from Friday to Sunday.
Disney has released other, smaller films into theaters (Foxās āThe New Mutantsā and Fox Searchlightās āThe Personal History of David Copperfieldā) but it has thus far either postponed or sent to streaming its bigger movies. Like āHamilton,ā āMulanā will be used to boost the 60 million-plus subscriber base of Disney+. Announcing the release plan last month, Disney chief executive Bob Chapek called it a āone-off.ā
āWe donāt see this as a new window, but itās an opportunity to learn,ā Disneyās distribution chief Cathleen Taff said. āThe one thing about this pandemic weāve learned is we canāt be set in our ways. We have to be fluid.ā
The move didnāt please theater owners, but Wall Street has endorsed it. Benjamin Swinburne, an analyst with Morgan Stanley, said in a note to investors that he sees premium on-demand āas long-term structurally beneficial to film studios, and likely less cannibalistic to moviegoing than feared.ā
Which way things break is anyoneās guess, but the releases of āTenetā and āMulanā may go a long way to redefining a movie business in the midst of technological and social upheaval. The movies lying in wait -- āWonder Woman 1984ā (Oct. 2), Marvelās āBlack Widowā (Nov. 6), Pixarās āSoulā (Nov. 20) -- will be watching.
Settling in for āTenet,ā Jose Alvarez, a 20-year-old from nearby White Plains, New York, was thrilled to be back at the movies.
āBecause movies are amazing. Weāre saving a lot of money because now weāre at home,ā said Alvarez with his mask pulled below his chin. āNot much to do there. Staying inside is not good for the health.ā
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AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr contributed to this report.