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CinemaCon 2014: Cinemas see satellite tech as ticket to bigger revenue

Randy Blotky, CEO of the Digital Cinema Distribution Coalition, stands by a satellite dish on the roof at the AMC Century City 15 theater. The satellite network significantly reduces the price of showing movies in theaters.
Randy Blotky, CEO of the Digital Cinema Distribution Coalition, stands by a satellite dish on the roof at the AMC Century City 15 theater. The satellite network significantly reduces the price of showing movies in theaters.
(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
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Tim Warner, chief executive of Cinemark Holdings Inc., admits he’d never heard of the popular science fiction series “Doctor Who.”

So the Montana native was skeptical when executives at BBC Wordwide approached him about the idea of screening a simulcast of the 50th anniversary episode of the cult-classic British TV series in Cinemark theaters across Latin America and the U.S.

In late November, hundreds of “Whovians” showed up at more than 700 theaters from Los Angeles to New York and Sao Paulo, Brazil, many dressed as their favorite characters, to watch screenings of the special “Doctor Who: The Day of the Doctor.”

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“To be honest, many of us had never heard of ‘Doctor Who,’” recalled Warner, who runs the nation’s third-largest theater chain. “They told us it was going to sell out. We said, ‘Yeah, right.’ Not only did it sell out, but people showed up in costumes.”

Tickets sold so quickly that Cinemark and other chains showing the episode had to add theaters to keep up with demand. The event convinced Warner that what happened with “Doctor Who” was just the tip of the iceberg in terms of TV shows, sports programs and other types of so-called alternative entertainment that could help redefine the way Americans think about the multiplex.

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Fred Medina, executive vice president of Latin America for BBC Worldwide, said the “Doctor Who” screenings demonstrated a new way to engage with fans of the show.

“It’s about building a broader relationship with our audiences,” Medina said.

Now, Warner and his executives are talking to the BBC and other TV producers about showing TV shows, concerts and sporting events at their venues, capitalizing on a new satellite network that makes it possible to beam live entertainment to most theaters in America.

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Although movies will always remain their bread and butter, theater executives such as Warner believe they can generate a growing business by showing something other than movies at the multiplex.

Currently, alternative content accounts for 1% or less of revenue for major circuits such as Cinemark. In three to five years, however, that could increase to 10% or more, Warner predicts.

“The technological barriers to doing this have really disappeared,” Warner said. “I would describe this as transformative.”

Theaters have been experimenting for several years with alternative programming, helping to fill up normally empty theaters during slow midweek periods. They’ve enjoyed success with sold-out screenings of the Metropolitan Opera, World Cup soccer games in 3-D, boxing matches and mixed martial arts bouts.

Until recently, however, technological hurdles limited the screenings to a few hundred theaters at a time, making it costly to program such content.

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That could change, thanks to the satellite network launched in October by the Digital Cinema Distribution Coalition, a consortium of studios and theater owners. Deluxe/Echo Star is the primary service provider.

The digital delivery of movies has long been the goal of studios and theaters, most of which have already installed digital projectors.

For decades, movies were delivered on heavy, bulky spools of actual film. More recently, most movies have been stored on digital hard drives and physically shipped to theaters across the country, a costly and time-consuming process.

The new system significantly reduces the price of showing movies in theaters. Ten to 15 years ago, it cost about $2,500 to deliver a film print to a theater. By comparison, it costs about $200 to $250 to distribute digital hard drives to movie theaters, and significantly less — at least half the cost of shipping hard drives around the country by truck and plane — to deliver content via satellite.

About 75% of the screens from the nation’s top three exhibitors have the ability to deliver movies and other entertainment via the satellite network.

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In all, about 950 of 1,300 theater locations in the U.S. — from theater chains Cinemark, AMC, Regal, National Amusements and Southern Theatres — will be satellite-capable this week, said Randy Blotky, CEO of the Digital Cinema Distribution Coalition. Satellite technology also is rapidly expanding in Latin America.

“Exhibitors are going to be limited by their own imaginations as to what they can put on their screens now,” said Blotky, noting that theaters could even be used to host massive multi-player online video games in which consumers compete with gamers across the country in a live event.

With the expanding satellite network, theater executives such as Warner are broadening their conversations with the heads of major studios, pitching them on the idea of the multiplex as a kind of vast TV network that could be programmed with specialized content, whether it be a live screening of “American Idol” or an NCAA championship basketball game.

Warner and Steve Bunnell, senior vice president of global content programming for Cinemark, recently met with executives at Fox, Sony, Disney and other studios to discuss the possibility of programming not just movies, but also sports and TV shows in theaters.

“You literally have the largest premium pay-per view network in the world,” notes Bunnell, who recently attended a BBC conference in Liverpool, England, where he found himself talking to TV producers about other BBC shows that could be screened in Cinemark’s theaters.

Persuading networks and sports leagues to allow theaters to screen TV shows or sporting events in theaters could be a challenge.

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Traditionally, it has been difficult and costly for theaters to secure permission from sports leagues to show big games in theaters. Television sports networks, which spend millions of dollars on licensing rights to broadcast games, may also balk at the concept.

But Warner contends that theaters would complement networks, not compete with them, providing another platform to promote their shows and events.

“To me it doesn’t compete with TV or sports bars,” Warner said. “It’s just additive.”

richard.verrier@latimes.com

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