Cineworld: 45,000 to lose their jobs as curtains close at UK and US cinemas

Business

Cineworld has confirmed plans to temporarily bring the curtain down on its UK and US cinemas because of continuing disruption from the coronavirus pandemic.

The company said its decision affects 45,000 staff, almost 6,000 of them in the UK, leaving their future employment hanging in the balance as it was yet to explain its plans for the workforce.

Sky News was seeking clarification on a number of points.

Cineworld announced the news 24 hours after receiving a backlash from staff over media reports that renewed delays to key releases – such as new James Bond movie No Time To Die – had forced the company into temporarily closing down screens.

Cineworld said on Sunday that no decision had been taken.

Its announcement to the City on Monday read: “Cineworld confirms that it will be temporarily suspending operations at all of its 536 Regal theatres in the US and its 127 Cineworld and Picturehouse theatres in the UK from Thursday 8 October 2020.

As major US markets, mainly New York, remained closed and without guidance on reopening timing, studios have been reluctant to release their pipeline of new films.

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“In turn, without these new releases, Cineworld cannot provide customers in both the US and the UK – the company’s primary markets – with the breadth of strong commercial films necessary for them to consider coming back to theatres against the backdrop of COVID-19.”

Cineworld was also yet to give information on the implications for membership customers.

Chief executive, Mooky Greidinger, said: “This is not a decision we made lightly, and we did everything in our power to support safe and sustainable reopenings in all of our markets – including meeting, and often exceeding, local
health and safety guidelines in our theatres and working constructively with regulators and industry bodies to restore public confidence in our industry.

“We are especially grateful for and proud of the hard work our employees put in to adapt our theatres to the new protocols and cannot underscore enough how difficult this decision was.

“Cineworld will continue to monitor the situation closely and will communicate any future plans to resume operations in these markets at the appropriate time, when key markets have more concrete guidance on their reopening status and, in turn, studios are able to bring their pipeline of major releases back to the big screen.”

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