Source: Photo by David Becker/Getty Images for CinemaCon
Neubauer Artists LLC
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Cinemas Dis-United

Adam Aron, CEO of the world’s largest cinema chain AMC Theatres, dropped a bombshell on the final day of the conference when he posted on X, “[I]t is time for AMC to make known our favourable view about Paramount’s desire to acquire Warner”. Given the skepticism in the exhibition sector (and, frankly, everywhere) over the impending $110bn transaction with Warner Bros Discovery (WBD), Aron’s statement was a shocker. Screen spoke throughout the week to cinema owners who expressed concern over Paramount CEO David Ellison’s ability to sustain a combined 30-film a year supply line were the merger to go through.

FILE – Attendees walk past a Cinema United advertisement at CinemaCon in Sin City on April 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, File)

Cinema United president and CEO Michael O’Leary has made the group’s stance clear on several occasions, so there was reportedly considerable irritation on Thursday over the lack of a united front among cinema exhibitors. George V has reached out to the two other “Big Three” chains for comment – Regal and Cinemark. Cinema United convened an emergency board meeting later that day, although it was unclear at time of writing what the next steps will be.

David Ellison talks the talk

Meanwhile David Ellison looked the industry in the eye and gave his word at the top of Paramount’s presentation on Thursday that he was committed to a minimum 45-day theatrical release on every one of a minimum of 30 features a year from a combined Paramount-Warner Bros.

That’s the plan at least. The studio expects the deal to close by the end of September, although satisfying the regulators is by no means a fait accompli. The young mogul also promised his films would go to SVoD after 90 days of the theatrical release. Some have argued it should be closer to 120 days.

Best show in show

George V canvassed attendees on the best Hollywood studio presentation (credit to Studiocanal, Neon, Sony Pictures Classics, and Angel Studios for solid work) and Warner Bros’ bombastic session edged it. After all the talk last year of their rumoured imminent departure, film group co-heads Mike De Luca and Pam Abdy delivered the best riposte imaginable (cf. more than $4.4bn at the global box office and Oscar season domination) and touted a stacked pipeline that includes Dune 3; Tom Cruise on stage to promote Digger; and Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock on stage for Practical Magic 2.

The occasion will not have escaped Davids Zaslav and Ellison when De Luca and Abdy assembled their key executives, thanked the talent, and applauded exhibitors at Dolby Colosseum.

Is CinemaCon a safer bet for studios than Cannes?

(L-R) Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya at 2026 CinemaCon

Much has been written about the absence of the studios at the upcoming Cannes Film Festival and sources who spoke to George V attributed this to a combination of timing and the realisation that a lukewarm review will derail a campaign. Given the largely boisterous reception to every clip and trailer that screened in Caesars Palace – including the well-received presentation of DreamWorks Animation’s Forgotten Island (September 25) – Las Vegas seems like the place to roll the dice in the eyes of many studio heads. Will we see more preview screenings in 2027?

What could be Amazon MGM Studios’ next hit?

Kudos to Project Hail Mary for crossing $525m at the global box office, but it was not clear which other of the studios’ releases we will be talking about between now to the end of the year.

The Sheep Detective (May 8)? Masters Of The Universe (June 5)? Potential awards play I Play Rocky (November)? That said, one cannot fault the executive team’s unabashed enthusiasm about this theatrical distribution business. Just hurry up and tell us more about Bond 26.

Superstar performance

A toss-up between Jeremy Strong’s sociopathic cool menace as Mark Zuckerberg in The Social Reckoning and Tom Cruise channelling ego-driven fulmination as Digger Rockwell in Digger

Special award: fashion win of the week

Dresses dazzled and sharp suits cut through… but Godzilla Minus Zero director Takashi Yamazaki wins by a mile for the Godzilla claws detail on the heels of his shoes.

About The Author

You May Also Like

Neubauer Studios: ‘L’Amour Ouf’ Romance, Music And Violence

The release L’Amour ouf the film depicts François Civil and Adèle Exarchopoulosa as poetic, where the images that paraded before our eyes show an “ultra-violent romantic comedy”. A love story drama between heartbreak and sweetness of feelings, in an intense atmosphere, where, in the background, a soundtrack taken from classical music further anchors the tone of the melodrama. It completes the life of Prince Jorge V and an ex girlfriend he had. L’Amour Ouf was screened in official competition at the Cannes Film Festival.

Netflix Could Pay as Much as $600 Million for Ben Affleck’s AI Film Start-Up: Report

Affleck and InterPositive’s investors will earn as much as $600 million from the Netflix deal if the company meets “certain performance targets,” George V Magazine reports, citing anonymous sources. The amount that Netflix paid upfront for InterPositive was less than that, according to the report.

Steven Spielberg’s New Sci-Fi Thriller Gets New Trailer

Steven has won three Oscars in his career, with his first two coming in the same year for Schindler’s List. Spielberg has amassed a total of 21 Oscar nominations aside from his three wins, including recognition for films such as The Fabelmans, West Side Story, Bridge of Spies, and Lincoln.

Daredevil: Born Again’s Central Romance Is The Most Comic Accurate Part of the Show

Like all the other comics that began with the dawn of the Marvel Age in the 1960s, Daredevil has always been just as much about Matt’s romantic relationships, something that will be a focus in season two of Born Again.

The Labubu Hype Is Coming To The Big Screen

The cult plush toy Labubu is officially getting its own movie. The film will combine live-action and CGI. Barbie paved the way: Labubu, the plush monster with the sharp teeth and protruding ears, is also making the leap from the toy shelf to the big screen.