Publicly-listed CinemaOne Ltd recorded an after-tax loss of $285,962, for the three months ended December 31, 2023, due to the Hollywood strike last year and the reduced movie content.
For the comparative period last year, the company made an after-tax loss of $29,913.
Chairman Brian Jahra said in its unaudited consolidated financials on Thursday that CinemaOne Limited was similarly impacted in the first quarter of its financial year 2024 with the postponement of notable movie releases such as Sony’s ‘Kraven the Hunter’ from October 2023 to August 2024, Warner Brothers’ ‘Dune II’ from October 2023 to March 2024 and Sony’s ‘Ghostbusters’ from December 2023 to March 2024.
Jahara outlined that CinemaOne which operates IMAX and Gemstone managed to mitigate the reduction in movie content through offsetting growth via the company’s strategic opening of its new CINECentral location in Price Plaza, Chaguanas. CINECentral commenced offering daily show schedules in mid-October 2023.
In the context of reduced movie content, the chairman said the volume for the Q1 FY 2024 period, particularly given the comparison to last year’s true blockbuster performance in Q1 FY 2023 of both Disney’s ‘Avatar-the Way of Water’ and ‘Black Panther Wakanda Forever,’ the CinemaONE Group’s Q1 FY 2024 results were as follows:
* Gross revenue was on par with the prior-year performance at $4.54 million (FY 2023: $4.59 million);
* Gross profit increased by 12 per cent to $2.9 million (FY 2023: $2.5 million) and
* The group maintained its operating profit with $.5 million (FY 2023: $.5 million).
However, Jahra highlighted that net losses increased to -$.3 million versus the prior-year performance (FY 2023: $.03 million).
He noted that the 2023 global box office marked a milestone in the industry’s recovery from COVID-19 and increased to US$33.9 billion up 31 per cent over 2022’s US$25.9 billion, but was still 15 per cent below the pre-COVID-19 global box office.
After a strong first eight months with a few titles exceeding US $1 Billion such as Universal Pictures’ ‘The Super Mario Bros.Movie’ (US $1.4 billion) and Warner Brothers’ cultural phenomenon ‘Barbie’ (US $1.4 billion), the combined Writers and Actors’ Strikes began to significantly impact the last quarter of 2023, reducing titles on offer and restricting marketing campaigns, Jahra said.
He said the strikes, which lasted over six months combined, ended in December, but only after triggering a lag in release dates of many anticipated titles.
Future outlook
Jahra said that management still expects that the supply chain impact of the recently concluded Hollywood strikes will somewhat retard growth and recovery expectations this financial year.
However, he identified that the Company’s strategic positioning and growth initiatives will assist the company in offsetting this impact.
“As the movie slate steadily improves and actors return to their important roles in global marketing promotions, the company looks forward to the upcoming releases of Bob Marley’s story in Universal’s ‘One Love,’ Sony’s ‘Madame Web,’ Warner Brothers’ highly anticipated ‘Dune II’ and ‘Godzilla x Kong the New Empire’,” the chairman added.