New York City movie theaters will reopen on March 5 at limited capacity, Cuomo says

amc movie theater nyc covid19
A view outside AMC 34th Street 14 movie theater during the coronavirus pandemic on May 14, 2020 in New York City. Noam Galai/Getty Images
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After nearly a year of being shut down, New York City movie theaters are coming back.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said on Monday that New York City movie theaters will be able to reopen on March 5 at 25% capacity, or up to 50 people per showing. Cuomo also said that assigned seating, social distancing, and other health precautions would be in place.

AMC Theatres' stock was up 12.46% on Monday after Cuomo's announcement. Cinemark was up 8.7%.

New York City is one of the last major theatrical hubs to reopen in the US. Los Angeles, another major market, is still closed. The city's theaters have been closed since mid-March last year due to the coronavirus pandemic, but movie theaters throughout the rest of New York state have already been open at limited capacity.

The pandemic has upended the theatrical industry over the last year. The 2020 North American box office declined 80.3% from 2019 and the global box office fell 71.3%, according to Comscore.

Theaters in the US closed in March for five months before reopening again in August ahead of the September release of Christopher Nolan's "Tenet." But major chains like Regal and Cineworld soon said they would shut down all locations in the US and UK again as coronavirus cases continued to soar.

In response, movie studios have sought alternatives to movie theaters, accelerating a shift to streaming. Disney and WarnerMedia have reorganized around their streaming businesses, resulting in massive layoffs. WarnerMedia-owned Warner Bros. is even releasing all of its new movies this year to HBO Max and theaters simultaneously.

Universal, on the other hand, has struck deals with major theater chains like AMC Theatres (the world's largest) to shorten the theatrical window from the typical 75 days to in most cases just 17, at which point the studio can debut movies on digital-rental platforms.

Experts says Universal's strategy could be the new normal, even after the pandemic. AMC even touted the plan as a reason to stay open in October as other chains closed.

"I think the old window concept was so outdated," said Harold Mintz, the president of movie-grading company CinemaScore, in an interview earlier this month. "The pandemic forced it, but it was bound to happen eventually ... most movies are played out [in theaters] after three weeks so it just makes sense."

Read the original article on Business Insider