How ‘Avengers: Endgame’ Capped a Decade of Change for Movie Theaters

How has the movie theater business changed in the last decade? Sure, there’s been streaming, declining ticket sales and a wave of recliners, alcohol and other new offerings to entice customers back to multiplexes. But on opening weekend of “Avengers: Endgame,” all those stormy warnings of industry decline never felt more distant. In theaters around the world, from rural markets to the biggest cities, screenings for the Marvel Studios blockbuster were selling out just minutes after advance tickets went on sale weeks before release. Hundreds of the largest theaters in the country stayed open around the clock for the whole weekend, and thousands more introduced new screenings once all their available showtimes sold out. And then when those new showtimes sold out, they added even more. Movie theaters have had to turn on all the concession cashiers and bring all hands on deck for event releases in the past — the 1999 release of “Star Wars: The Phantom Menace” comes to mind — but nothing on the scale seen with the release of “Avengers: Endgame.” That theaters were able to so quickly meet that demand is thanks to several key technological advances and trends that evolved in the last decade:...

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