Aron said his company reconsidered its plans to
open dozens of theaters, which the company announced last
spring, following the October murder of Washington Post writer
Jamal Khashoggi in a Saudi consulate. The killing sparked an
international outcry.
The CIA and some Western countries suspect Saudi Arabian Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered the killing just over six
months ago. Saudi authorities vehemently deny he was involved.
"It certainly made us think in great depth," Aron said in an
interview this week in Las Vegas at CinemaCon, an annual
convention for theater owners.
"What we concluded at AMC is that if we continued with the
opening of theaters in the Middle East, that we were doing
something very good for the people of the country," he said.
"And we decided that what was in the best interest of the people
was the right course of action for us."
AMC, the biggest cinema chain in the United States and the
world, is working on the theaters through a partnership with
Saudi Arabian sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund
(PIF).
John Fithian, president of the National Association of Theatre
Owners, said on Tuesday that at least three theater chains were
moving forward with plans to add screens in Saudi Arabia. He
declined to name the companies.
Fithian told reporters the killing of Khashoggi was "a tragic,
awful human rights violation", but added: "I don't think it's
our business to make foreign policy as a trade association."
"The idea of having the freedom to see movies in a country ...
can only help to open up thinking in that country," he said.
"Movies have always been a sword for freedom."
The Saudi government communications office did not immediately
respond to a request to comment.
A year ago, Saudi Arabia lifted a nearly four-decade ban on
cinemas. AMC screened the first film, Walt Disney Co's superhero
hit "Black Panther", at a movie house in Riyadh, and other
companies announced plans to operate theaters in the country.
But shortly after Khashoggi's killing, cinema chain Vue
International put on hold plans to open as many as 30 locations
in Saudi Arabia, Chief Executive Officer Tim Richards told The
Guardian newspaper at the time.
Hollywood talent agency and media company Endeavor also returned
a $400 million investment to the Saudi Arabian government to
protest the killing.
Aron said his company had a "significant number" of theaters
under lease in Saudi Arabia and many will open in 2019. He also
expects to have "50 theaters open four to five years from now".
The AMC theater in Riyadh has shown dozens of films over the
past year, he added.
"The theater has been immensely popular," he said, "as you would
expect in a city of 7 million people that now has two movies
theaters, in a country that likes movies and saw movies
frequently, just not in theaters."
(Reporting by Lisa Richwine; Editing by Bill Tarrant, Sonya
Hepinstall and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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