The world may not be completely shifting to streaming-first, with regard to big theatrical viewing.
A new deal with WarnerMedia and Cineworld Group, which operates Regal Theaters, says
theatrical movies will get an exclusive cinema period before moving on to streaming.
Starting in 2022, Regal
Theaters will get a 45-day exclusive window.
One slight change: Before the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. movie theaters had as much as a 90-day window before moving to different TV-centric
windows: DVDs, streaming, single transactional TV viewing from pay TV providers, and other areas.
Last December, WarnerMedia made a bold decision: Its entire 2021 movie slate of 17 movies
would running simultaneously on its streaming platform, HBO Max, and in theaters.
For its part, WarnerMedia prefaced this move -- perhaps overlooked by some from the business press -- that the
decision was a only for 2021, leaving open the possibility of changes thereafter.
advertisement
advertisement
Disney continues to say it will adjust movie releases on a case-by-case basis -- some simultaneously (with a
streaming surcharge), and some exclusive to Disney+ (no surcharge), some regular theatrical releases.
And even then, under the simultaneous release schedule, Disney takes a different tack --
where movies run on Disney+ and in theaters at the same time.
These films will have a $30 surcharge for streaming. This will include upcoming movies: The live-action film “Cruella”
and Marvel Studios’ “Black Widow.”
Disney also offers streaming movies with no theatrical showings. This summer, it will release a Pixar Animation Studio movie
“Luca” June 18 exclusively on Disney+ at no extra charge. This follows what the studio did for “Soul” over the holidays.
There are other more straightforward theatrical
releases scheduled: “Free Guy” (August 13); “Shang Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings” (September 3); “The King’s Man” (December 22); “Deep
Water” (January 14, 2022); and “Death on the Nile” (February 11, 2022).
Since December, movie producers, directors and critics have ripped into WarnerMedia for its
controversial plan -- all that augur the theatrical movie business would see other studios join the trend.
Consider now that its somewhat under-the-radar deal with CineWorld -- and
Disney’s continued individual movie-by-movie distribution plan -- are just muting reactions around a much more complicated TV and theatrical entertainment industry business -- one that may need
to find more permutations.
And perhaps some more controversy too.