Eateries That Help Downtown Movie Theaters

The Cinemart Movieplex in Forest Hills, NY, benefits from being next to a legendary “sweet shop” with homemade ice cream and an old soda fountain on one side and a cafe that is popular with outdoor dinners on the other.

This kind of “context” enables downtown movie theaters to survive. It makes going to the movies a special event, quite different from watching a flick at home. There is a brief slide show below that shows the movie house, Eddie’s Sweet Shop and the Theater Cafe. Eddie’s and the Cinemart have been around for 50+ years.


Is Our Great Recession Saving Downtown Movie Theaters?

About a year ago, I wrote that downtown movie theaters were increasingly in jeopardy because people were more and more watching movies at home. Lately, I have been asked if I still believed downtown cinemas were in trouble, since recent media reports indicated that:

  • Nationwide, movie attendance was up 21% in the first seven weeks of 2009
  • The National Association of Theatre Owners claims box office numbers climbed in five of the seven economic downturns that occurred over the past 40 years.
  • It is well-known that movie attendance rose sharply at the height of the Great Depression
  • The stocks of the movie theater chains lately have risen substantially.
First, it should be noted that a seven week attendance pattern ought to be treated with caution, especially when it is contrary to a longer term trend.

Total U.S. & Canada Admissions
Year Admissions
2008 1.363
2007 1.400
2006 1.395
2005 1.376
2004 1.484
2003 1.521
2002 1.599
2001 1.438
2000 1.383
1999 1.440
1998 1.438
1997 1.354

Source: National Association of Theatre Owners

Total admissions in the USA and Canada for the full year of 2008 – when we where already in recession – was the lowest since 1997.

But, the primary reason that I still think downtown cinemas are in trouble is the behavior of highly regarded Hollywood moguls such as James Cameron and Jeffrey Katzenberg and the movie theatre chains. Cameron and Katzenberg both believe that the future of the movie theater business rests on 3-D movies because “going to the movies” has to once again become a special occasion, quite different from watching a flick at home. The movie chains have been investing a lot of money in more IMAC screens and now they are trying to raise between $700 million to $1 billion to convert enough screens—at $100,000 a shot –- to 3-D.

Some smaller, but savvy movie theater operators are doing such things as running “dinner cinemas,” where you get both a good film and a quality meal. Others are opening restaurants or brewpubs next door.

The downtown movie theaters that are really endangered – regardless of how they are drawing now – are those that cannot turn watching a movie into a special occasion. That is the key for the future. Dirty sticky floors, uncomfortable seating, inadequate restrooms, uncivil patrons, run of the mill films, etc., are not characteristics of a special occasion that will draw film viewers from their homes, but far too many downtown cinemas have them. Improving these theaters will not be cheap. Nor will it be cheap to provide them with 3-D equipment.

I do not know whether 3-D is the silver bullet. Here in Kew Gardens, we have a six screen cinemaplex that has absolutely no off-street parking, but it has been packed every weekend for many years. It is located in a densely populated neighborhood and features current “indy” films to an audience that rarely has a teenager in it – I’d say most patrons are over 40. Larry Houstoun reports similarly successful small cinemas near him in downtown Philadelphia. Indy flicks for seniors or IMAC or 3-D or whatever that makes going to the movies a special occasion is what counts!

If downtown organizations want their independent cinemas to survive they will have to help the operators again provide a venue where going to the movies is a special occasion.

DOWNTOWN MOVIE THEATERS WILL BE INCREASINGLY IN PERIL

Our Lustrum Trends Assessments.

For the past 20 years, about every five years (a lustrum) DANTH, Inc. has engaged in a review of the social, economic and political trends that are — or soon will be– affecting the health and well-being of downtown, urban neighborhood and Main Street commercial districts. We do this because it is an essential asset when we work on any kind of revitalization strategy for our clients.

Being a curmudgeon, I must also strongly opine that being aware of these trends and their potential effects is an essential component of any district manager’s job. Unfortunately it is a job function that too many managers ignore.

The results of DANTH’s last trends assessment in 2003 are available free of charge at: https://www.ndavidmilder.com/pdf/trends_3_25_05.pdf

Below is a “tease” excerpt from the first installment of the 2008 assessment.

Downtown Movie Theaters Are Very Vulnerable.

Downtown movie theater closures are bad news because:
• They are usually important downtown assets
• Closed cinemas are usually large, highly visible spaces, occupying considerable frontage and consequently a huge negative for a downtown’s image. It is also usually very hard to re-tenant an empty cinema — too many stay vacant for numerous years, often for decades. Some of the conversions, e.g., bingo halls and flea markets, are often less than desirable for spaces having prime locations and large size.

Movie theaters are in an increasingly weakened position because:
• Their hold on adult audiences is small and diminishing. By a five-to-one ratio Americans view films more at home than they do in movie theaters. Move theaters account for only about 12% of the movie industry’s revenues.
• Even the most frequent movie goers prefer home viewing
• Many theaters have low operating margins based primarily on revenues from concession stands and screen ads. Just a small drop in the paid attendance can be devastating financially: a mere six percent drop in attendance in 2000-2001 put most of the theater chains into bankruptcy.
• A relatively modest reduction in paid attendance by a small group of frequent moviegoers could easily erase these meager margins. The frequent movie goers do not have to completely stop visiting movies theaters for the impact to be devastating. This is an important point.
• The frequent movie-goers have demographic characteristics that highly correlate with the use of computers and other electronic home entertainment equipment
• Many theaters lack amenities such as many screens, large screens, first run films, stadium seating, clean restrooms and theaters floors. This is especially true of cinemas in small and medium-sized downtowns
• Theaters provide a very small revenue stream for the major movie studios. Consequently, the studios are incentivized to make decisions that will help other film distribution channels although they may hurt the theaters

Rival Home Film Distribution Channels Are Poised To Grab Market Share.

Competing film distribution channels have been improving, many finding formulas that are aimed straight at the three key variables that most impact film viewer behavior — convenience, film selection and cost:
• On-demand cable TV has great convenience, wide household penetration, competitive prices and indications that some large operators will be offering significantly greater film selections. The introduction of HD broadcasts will also improve product quality and enhance competitive strength
• Apple TV and Vudu have a strong films service formula that could really grab market share if they can offer sufficient film variety. They, too, already offer on-demand convenience and competitive prices. Apple, because of iTunes, has a large amount of household penetration and brand loyalty.
• The competitive strengths of the brick and mortar DVD shops and the mail delivered DVD services versus movie theaters has been improved recently by the growing presence of large HD TVs in American households and the final victory of the Blu-ray HD DVD format.

Tipping Point Scenarios.

Below are some scenarios under which a tipping point might occur:
• The cable TV and Internet film services improve their film libraries sufficiently to become real competitors with movie theaters.
• Real household incomes erode to the point that the cost of movie consumption grows in importance in consumer decision-making. The cost advantage of home viewing, popcorn, sodas, baby-sitting, etc, is substantial. Given the recent low growth in median household incomes and the soaring costs of medical services, energy, college educations, etc. and the reduced values of private homes, this scenario is likely to have substantial impact.
• The convenience and comfort of home movie theaters increase to the point that consumers prefer the home viewing experience even more than reported in the 2006 Pew survey. This is occurring now; the question is how big its impact will be.
• The major studios finally go for “simultaneous releases.” In 2006 and 2007 there was a lot of discussion within the major movie studios about releasing films to theaters, cable TV and Internet film services at the same time, with DVDs being released three months later. A major survey of movie audiences in the USA, Japan and Germany, which account for over half of the world’s film market, found that simultaneous releases would enable the studios to increase their revenues by 16%, but cause the revenues of movie theaters to shrink by 40%. More recently there has been some discussion of simultaneous releases for a limited number of films.
• An accumulation of impacts from all of the above.

The Complete Report

DANTH’s complete assessment of the dangers that downtown movie theaters will be increasingly facing will be posted on our website www.ndavidmilder.com and publicly available by March 24th, 2008. As our current work on trends progresses, I plan to periodically post the complete reports of our findings on our website and excerpts on this blog. Here are some of the other topics we’ve been looking at in our assessment:
• Time-pressured people continue to be downtowns’ best friends
• Retailing is in for much tougher times
• Post-Kelo redevelopment
• Boomers are now seniors and a great market segment for downtowns
• Green redevelopment
• Owners or renters: downtown residential redevelopment
• Downtown crime redux
• Downtown solution trends:
— Mixed-use projects
— Transit-oriented development, getting more important every day
— Place-making
— Niche development
• Downtown organizations: a time to alter missions, roles and responsibilities
• The internet and downtown revitalization

Unfortunately, some of the trends DANTH identified suggest that downtowns will soon be confronting major new challenges. DANTH believes that being forewarned enables downtown organizations to be forearmed. Although proven solutions to these emerging threats do not exist, I will try in my postings to outline some approaches to finding them, while welcoming other members of the downtown revitalization community to share their solution suggestions.