Credit: leszekglasner / Getty Images / Mercury composite
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leszekglasner / Getty Images / Mercury composite

Portland’s movie theater landscape is dominated by the Tennessee-based Regal Entertainment Group, the second largest theater chain in the country. Variety reports the chain is planning to experiment with surge pricing.

Hey, just like Uber! Neat!

The Regal Entertainment Group exhibition chain will test demand-based pricing for film tickets in several markets early next year through its partnership with mobile ticketing app maker Atom Tickets.

The move could lead to higher prices for blockbusters and lower prices for unsuccessful films. Three-year-old Atom, backed by Disney, Fox, and Lionsgate, has been pushing chains to take such a step. (Via.)

The past few years, there have been rumblings of corporate theater chains trying surge pricing, but I, for one, found it hard to take them seriouslyโ€”mostly because moviegoing already seems to be in a precarious state.

Mainstream film offerings are growing increasingly narrow as studios eliminate midrange films in favor of macro-budget franchises and micro-budget horror, and theaters are having an increasingly difficult time luring audiences away from streaming services. (“Summer Box-Office Debacle: Moviegoing Hits 25-Year Low as Revenue Plummets,” read a Hollywood Reporter headline last month.) So maybe now isn’t the best time to start charging people even more for the movies that they want to see? Or is it*?

So far, Regal hasn’t said what markets they’ll be testing surge pricing in, or how much more expensive their “demand-based” tickets will be. In Portland, Regal’s current ticket prices for standard screenings generally range from $10 to $12, with tickets for 3D and IMAX-branded screenings going for $13 to $19.

As development has heated up around the Lloyd District, the future of Regal’s flagship Portland location, the Lloyd Center 10, remains hazy. In 2015, there were reports that the land the multiplex currently occupies would be developed; a few months later, Regal told the Oregonian they were “regarding new theater options” in order to stay in the area.

For the past few years, Regal’s been dealing with antitrust lawsuits that allege the chain uses its size to keep its competitorsโ€”including local and independent theatersโ€”from showing the most successful films.

Speaking of independent and local theaters, here are the best places to see a movie in Portland. Please note that none of them have surge pricing.

*Okay, everything I “know” about “business” I’ve “learned” from Shark Tank. I know a lot about movies, but other than being on the receiving end of it, I don’t know a lot about consumer exploitation. So for those reasons, I’m out.

With honor and distinction, Erik Henriksen served as the executive editor of the Portland Mercury from 2004 to 2020. He can now be found at henriksenactual.com.

4 replies on “Regal Cinemas to Test Surge Pricing”

  1. Seems kind of stupid considering all the options there are for viewing video entertainment. Not the same as a finite amount of ubers, or hotel rooms, for major events.

  2. The plan by Regal should really boost the sales of Movie Pass. For $9.95/month, you get unlimited entry to movies at most major cinemas nationwide. Nope, no discounts on popcorn.

  3. Sorry… Regal dominates here? That’s funny: With the sheer number of McMenamins and Wunderland theaters and independents like Cinema 21, Cinemagic, the Laurelhurst, Living Room and the Hollywood, I’d think Regal would have a pretty hard time here. Even on weekends, people here seem far more prone to flock to the Living Room, Cinema 21 or the Bagdad than Regal Fox Tower.

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