CinemaCon 2025: Here’s What Worked & Didn’t Work
With a domestic box office year now lagging behind last year’s by 6% (it was -11% as of last Sunday), the motion picture industry needed CinemaCon this week like a pop of Viagra. Here are the takeaways from Las Vegas:
There’s Still A Belief That Theatrical Can Work
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We are in a massive funk no doubt at the domestic box office, with the big question is whether we’ll ever get back to 2018 levels, when it grossed $11.9 billion. However, what was clear coming away from the studio-exhibitor love-in at Caesars Palace was that the studios aren’t bailing on theatrical: they delivered the stars, they delivered stunts (we’ll get into that) with a robust lineup of product including Avatar: Fire & Ash, Superman, Jurassic World Rebirth, Ballerina, Lilo & Stich, Mission: Impossible – Final Reckoning to indicate that better days are ahead. In fact, after this weekend’s $135 million+ opening for Warner Bros/Legendary’s A Minecraft Movie, we might be turning that corner right now.
Realize this: If we had anything to worry about when it comes to the future of theatrical, it would show in the studios scaling back the wattage of their presentations. That didn’t happen: Lionsgate stepped it up in a major way, Amazon MGM Studios was present, and even though Sony didn’t have cowbell in its 2025 slate, they did blast off fireworks with its confirmation of the cast for Sam Mendes’ The Beatles and the unprecedented release plan to roll out all four biopics in April 2028. If the studios weren’t showing footage or bringing stars, then we would have reason to worry.
When it comes to a studio asking talent to show up, the press doesn’t realize what a big deal that is. When studio publicity asks a star upfront for something, there’s always another thing that will get subtracted from them in the long run down the road toward a movie’s release. And it costs a ton of money to send talent. With Tom Cruise, Scarlett Johansson, Jenna Ortega, Leonardo DiCaprio, Ana de Armas, Glen Powell, Chris Pratt, Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Zoe Saldaña and many more in attendance, this CinemaCon wasn’t lacking in celebrity turnout. That tells you how serious the studios are about making theatrical work.
Studio flacks always love to ask, “What did you think of our presentation? Wasn’t ours the best?” For me, it’s a personal aesthetic. I was particularly excited to see footage from Warner Bros’ biggest swings — Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another, and Maggie Gyllenhaal’s The Bride! — and boy, do they look like a lot of fun. Jesus, ain’t Ryan Gosling hysterical? That’s just organic; you can’t plan that. During his session for Amazon MGM Studios’ Project Hail Mary, he quipped, “I put the ‘not’ in astronaut; I’ve never done a spacewalk — I can’t even moonwalk,” and relayed how the pic was meant for the big screen: “We tried to put it on a TV once — it wouldn’t fit.”
If there are a few quick notes. Sure, Sony, we would have liked to have seen more.
Amazon MGM Studios had the latest slot ever for a studio presentation — from 8:15-10 p.m. (it wrapped at 9:45pm) — on Wednesday. That’s not just tough on the press, but tough for all the execs and stars taking the stage. This had to do with Universal taking up a majority of the day with How to Train Your Dragon screening in the AM and booking the 4-6 p.m. slot in the Colosseum for their session. From what I hear, Amazon MGM got the short end of the stick because they were the new kids on the block. Still, Amazon MGM Studios, don’t ever let Cinema United (formerly known as NATO) book you past a 5 p.m. slot ever again. Cinema United, we like to see movies at night, not during the day.
Does any film look like it’s in dire straits? At a $140 million cost, there’s no spaceship in that Paul Thomas Anderson film — as much as I want to see it. Also, some felt the Q&A with James Gunn, Peter Safran and cast went a little too long on Superman, and there was cynicism from some in the media over the whole robots tending to the Man of Steel in the Fortress of Solitude. Such CinemaCon footage is typically held for later in a marketing campaign, but Gunn proudly gave it to fans online before Disney’s Marvel Cinematic Universe portion hit the stage Thursday afternoon.
Finally, in regards to reports about the Colosseum crowd’s tepid response to stars or presentations, know that exhibitors in the room have never been a ferocious Cannes Film Festival crowd with standing ovations and whistling. It’s not their style. In my 10 years of covering CinemaCon, I can’t recall a standing ovation. A warm applause is a big deal, and there was plenty of that.
Progress With Theatrical Windows
As AMC CEO Adam Aron told Deadline’s Jill Goldsmith exclusively, he’s made progress with three of the six major studios in agreeing to a 45-day theatrical window. We know Disney is one, and possibly Amazon MGM Studios another, and we know that the whole idea of windows will be a hard sell to Universal (Aron was mum on specifics). One notable industry CEO remarked to me that the exhibitors’ haggling over 45 days is “small ball.” I wholeheartedly disagree. Fewer people are going to the movies. The conditioning of keeping potential moviegoers at home with streaming is a reality. We just went through this in Q1. Exhibition should continue to push and prod the bear. However, note that all this window talk is a two-way street. It’s not just about poor exhibition with their 35% rental. Some studios argue that exhibition doesn’t hold smaller- and middle-budget pictures long enough, that they’re always getting boxed out for the next new tentpole. Studios, you also slash marketing budgets on low- to mid-budget titles. One distribution suit told Deadline about the news, “‘Adam Aron, guarantee me a 45-day exclusive window, and I’ll go talk to my bosses.”
When It Comes To Social Media During Presentations, Disney Gets It, But The Rest Of The Studios Are Clueless
This is a really big, serious note. There’s this whole notion of “what studios are showing is only for those in the room. Shhhh. Not share!” Get off your G.D. high horses and realize that the domestic box office just burnt down in Q1. I understand studios’ philosophies in holding footage or trailers for a specific point down the road in a movie’s campaign (sometimes they don’t — Tron: Ares just dropped a trailer today, and Paramount’s released The Naked Gun trailer timed to its Thursday presentation). However, America needs to know, as they do with San Diego Comic-Con, that a major movie convention with a ton of stars is taking place in Las Vegas. Create FOMO. The only studio to permit the shooting of their onstage presentations (not onscreen footage) was Disney for a second year in a row. Such moments create interest and want-to-see for your movie. Get it? Last year, it was MCU boss Kevin Feige F-bombing onstage during Deadpool & Wolverine, and Dwayne Johnson and Hawaiian dancers for Moana 2. This year, Disney allowed such great moments to be broadcasted on social:
The Thunderbolts* cast’s hysterical arrival onstage, the troupe having just rescued Wyatt Russell from losing at the casino tables.
The ‘Thunderbolts*’ cast make a funny entrance as they arrive from outside of the Colosseum | #CinemaCon pic.twitter.com/Ea1HBlgaxO
— Deadline (@DEADLINE) April 3, 2025
And a Tron: Ares laser light show.
An epic intro for ‘Tron: Ares’ at #CinemaCon pic.twitter.com/1tw174LxCe
— Deadline (@DEADLINE) April 3, 2025
There were so many sublime moments this year including Tom Cruise’s remembrance of Val Kilmer, Jenna Ortega’s banter with Lionsgate Motion Picture chair Adam Fogelson (“Don’t be so self-deprecating, dude.”), The Weeknd’s mini-concert performance tied to his movie Hurry Up Tomorrow (it opens in theaters May 16 — it would be great if the world knew that from his performance), Gosling’s jokes, and Universal’s 43-piece orchestra. All of these great moments are lost in space because of studio marketing departments’ cockiness. Traffic gets created when many are recording it and passing it along, versus the @CinemaCon X exclusively posting it to their 31,000 followers. Who cares if there’s social media footage of Olivia Wilde getting served divorce papers onstage when she’s talking about Don’t Worry Darling? (that happened three years ago). I bring this up because there’s probably some talent rep out there who needs a Come to Jesus when realizing that the gains of capturing a star’s appearance goes a long way in promoting a project versus the fears that they’ll malaprop onstage. The Wilde news wound up getting out and was the spark that lit the wick around all the behind-the-scenes drama on that production, teeing up intrigue and want-to-see for the edgy romantic drama and a $19.3M opening. Now, what studio wouldn’t want that for a mid-sized movie right now?
Kudos to those studios, like Lionsgate and Amazon MGM, for holding red carpets and press ops. There should be more of that at CinemaCon to broadcast the message of “see our films in a movie theater.”
Andrew Garfield, Ayo Edebiri and Luca Guadagnino on what they learned about one another through collaborating on ‘After the Hunt’ | #CinemaCon pic.twitter.com/7K80TPhJnS
— Deadline (@DEADLINE) April 3, 2025
Ana de Armas on reuniting with Keanu Reeves for #BallerinaMovie and establishing the dynamic audiences will see between Eve Macarro and John Wick pic.twitter.com/VP2FcyEadX
— Deadline (@DEADLINE) April 2, 2025
Excitement About Amazon MGM Studios
They’ve arrived and they’re serious about theatrical distribution. Hallelujah. Said Prime Video and Amazon MGM Studios Head Mike Hopkins onstage, “We are committed to doing this for the long term and when Amazon commits to something, we tend to do it big.” Beamed Rick Roman, a Kentucky-Delaware exhibitor who likes to speak to truth to power: “Amazon MGM’s commitment to theaters and slate of films adds another major studio. Instead of a pipeline with five majors we now have a sixth with 14 to 15 films. It is a 20% improvement in filmmaking power.”
Cinema United, It’s Time for a Change-Up in Venue, Improved Press Accommodations, And Tell Security To Calm The Hell Down
Our final notes are for you, CinemaCon. We know there’s a lot of passion when it comes to planning this event, and there’s a lot passion from us, the media. Time to head to a new hotel; Caesars is old and dusty. Furthermore, create a press section in the orchestra or downstairs section, with risers and tables and power strips for us to work at comfortably as we’re churning away on copy (this is actually very doable: Warner Bros had this setup in place when it did an HBO Max launch pre-Covid on the Burbank, CA lot).
Lastly, CinemaCon security’s treatment of the press is uncalled for. There were reports that another major trade editor had a dust-up with security involving a cell phone. I’ve been there in previous years, so I feel for them. In fact, sometimes security doesn’t get it that laptops are allowed to be open in the press section during presentations: They were a little wild with the green laser pen on day one. Last year, another editor was taken aside by security and asked to delete photos off his cell phone. This year, my fellow colleagues were harassed as we were finishing some last-minute details on stories after a panel. We were told if we didn’t clear the press area ASAP, we’d be removed, like we were Abbie Hoffman or something. We’re at CinemaCon to cover your event, Cinema United. We are not there to pirate movies, nor or we there to illegally post trailers on YouTube.
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