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				 Before the rules went into effect, studios commonly sold 
				multiple films to theaters as a package. The U.S. Supreme Court 
				in 1948 ruled against the practice, called "block booking," and 
				others that favored studios, leading the plaintiff, Paramount 
				Pictures, Inc, and its peers to sign consent decrees over the 
				next few years with the Justice Department that banned such 
				deals. 
 The department announced in August it was reviewing some 1,300 
				such decrees affecting a range of industries, which have no 
				expiration date, with an eye toward cancelling them.
 
 The agreements regulating relations between movie studios and 
				theaters, which the industry calls the Paramount consent 
				decrees, were reached in the late 1940s and early 1950s when 
				movie theaters had just one screen, televisions were not 
				universal, and online streaming was decades into the future.
 
				
				 
				
 "They'll be able to get more of their duds played in your 
				theaters," said Brian Fridley, whose father started Iowa-based 
				Fridley Theatres in the 1930s. "If you're forced to play the 
				less popular films, that's going to eat up your profits. Maybe 
				all your profits."
 
 Fridley said his chain of 20 movie theaters and 86 screens might 
				be forced to show poor performers like 21st Century Fox's "The 
				Darkest Minds." The dystopian teen movie made $13 million in the 
				United States, compared with $700 million for "Black Panther," 
				according to Box Office Mojo.
 
 Box office sales bring in a good chunk of theater revenues, even 
				as viewers increasingly watch movies on television and online. 
				For example, Viacom Inc, which owns Paramount, said in an annual 
				report that movies shown in theaters brought in 25 percent of 
				its filmed entertainment revenues for 2017, while home 
				entertainment brought in 26 percent and licensing brought in 40 
				percent.
 
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				The National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO), which 
				represents movie theater companies with 33,000 screens across 
				the United States, urged the department to forbid movie studios 
				to return to the practice of block booking. 
				Justice Department officials believe the fears are overblown 
				because it is not in studios' financial interest to force 
				theaters to show poor performing films, according to a person 
				familiar with the government's thinking.
 The Motion Picture Association of America declined to comment, 
				referring Reuters to the studios. The six biggest U.S. film 
				studios are Warner Bros, owned by AT&T; 21th Century Fox, which 
				is selling its movie studio to rival Walt Disney Co; Paramount; 
				Universal Pictures, which is owned by Comcast Corp; and Sony 
				Pictures.
 
 The biggest U.S. movie theater companies include AMC 
				Entertainment, Regal Entertainment owned by Britain's Cineworld 
				and Cinemark.
 
 All of the studios and major movie theater companies either 
				declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment.
 
 (Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Richard Chang)
 
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