Cobb Theatres

Cobb Theatres was an American cinema chain based in Birmingham, Alabama. The company was established in 1921, in Fayette, Alabama,[1] expanding through the South starting in the late 1940s, and buying out General Cinema's West Central Florida theatres and Wometco Theatres in the 1990s before being bought by Regal Cinemas in 1997 and revived in 2001. Cobb operated 25 locations, the majority of which were located in Florida, with others in Alabama, Georgia, Ohio, North Carolina, and Virginia.

Cobb Theatres III, LLC
Cobb Theatres
FateAcquired by CMX Cinemas
SuccessorCMX Cinemas
FoundedDecember 14, 2000 (2000-12-14)
DefunctDecember 11, 2017 (2017-12-11)
Headquarters,
Number of locations
25 theatres
Key people
Robert M. Cobb
(CEO & President)
Ricky W. Thomas
(CFO)
Websitewww.cmxcinemas.com
CinéBistro logo

History

R.C. Cobb, Inc.
Cobb Theatres II, LLC
Cobb Theatres
FormerlyRichards Theatres (1921-57)
Cobb Movies (1983-92)
FateAcquired by Regal Cinemas
PredecessorWometco Theatres (1925-94)
SuccessorRegal Cinemas
Founded1921 (1921)
DefunctJuly 31, 1997 (1997-07-31)
Headquarters,
Key people
Robert M. Cobb
(CEO & President)

In 1921, Jefferson A. Richards opened his family's first movie theatre in Fayette, Alabama. Lucille Richards Cobb purchased the theatre from Jefferson in 1934. In 1947, Rowland C. Cobb bought Lucille's two theatres and started building indoor and drive-in theatres throughout northern Alabama.

Notable theatres opened by Cobb included the Thunderbird Drive-In in Atlanta (the South's largest and most modern drive-in theatre) in 1963, the United States' first four-plex theatre in 1971, Cinema City 8 at Birmingham's Roebuck Shopping Center (the largest eight-plex theatre in the US) in 1978, and Sawgrass 18 (promoted as the largest theatre east of the Rocky Mountains) in 1991. Cobb operated 27 theatres by 1965. The following year, Cobb purchased eight theatres in Birmingham, Alabama and moved the company's offices to Birmingham.

Cobb Theatres expanded into South Florida by purchasing General Cinema's theatres in West Central Florida in 1992 and Wometco Theatres in 1994 (forming Cobb Theatres II following the Wometco acquisition), bringing Cobb's screen total to 315. Robert M. Cobb succeeded Rowland as the company's CEO on December 1, 1995. On June 11, 1997, it was announced that Regal Cinemas would acquire Cobb Theatres, which had 643 screens at 67 theatres, for $200 million plus $100 million in debt; Regal completed the acquisition on July 31.[2][3]

Robert M. Cobb decided to re-enter the cinema industry by forming Cobb Theatres III in 2000. Cobb opened the Dolphin 19 theatre in Miami, Florida on May 25, 2001, attracting 1.4 million visitors. Cobb grew to 11 theatres with 166 screens by 2006. In 2008, Cobb introduced CinéBistro, an elevated premium dinner-and-a-movie concept, in Miami and Tampa. Cobb expanded into Colorado, Virginia and Georgia by 2011, growing to 21 theatres with 253 screens.

CMX Cinemas

Mexican cinema chain Cinemex launched its CMX Cinemas subsidiary (which would provide U.S. locations with a premium cinema concept) with a theatre at Wellington, Florida in December 2016 and one at Brickell City Centre in Miami, Florida in April 2017. In October, CMX acquired Cobb Theatres, which made it the eighth-largest U.S. cinema chain with 30 locations.[4]

On March 16, 2020, CMX agreed to acquire 10 theatres and one under development from Star Cinema Grill; however, Star Cinema Grill owner Omar Khan filed a lawsuit in April alleging that CMX breached its contract by refusing to close the deal by March 26 because of the COVID-19 pandemic. CMX filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on April 25 due to the pandemic; CMX shuttered 10 underperforming theatres and was initially unable to renegotiate contracts with creditors such as landlords and movie studios.[5] Following a six-month negotiation with creditors, CMX emerged from bankruptcy in December; landlords agreed to modified revenue-share leases where they will receive part of the theatres' profits.[6]

Cinema locations

Name City Opening Date
CMX Pinnacle 14 Gulf Shores, Alabama July 22, 2005
CMX Hollywood 16 & IMAX Tuscaloosa, Alabama November 5, 2004
CMX Lakeside Village 18 & IMAX Lakeland, Florida December 22, 2005
CMX Merritt Square 16 & IMAX Merritt Island, Florida May 21, 2004
CMX Dolphin 19 & IMAX Miami, Florida May 25, 2001
CMX Miami Lakes 17 Miami Lakes, Florida June 29, 2000
CMX Downtown In The Gardens Palm Beach Gardens, Florida November 23, 2005
CMX CinéBistro Hyde Park Tampa, Florida October 16, 2009
CMX Grand 10 Winter Haven, Florida November 15, 2002
CMX CinéBistro Stony Point Richmond, Virginia October 22, 2010
CMX Plaza Café 12 Orlando, Florida December 12, 2010
CMX Village 14 Leesburg, Virginia July 23, 2011
CMX Countryside Clearwater, Florida December 16, 2011
CinéBistro Waverly Place Cary, North Carolina September 4, 2015
CMX CinéBistro and CMX Liberty Liberty Township, Butler County, Ohio November 5, 2015
CMX CinéBistro Siesta Key Sarasota, Florida February 12, 2016
CMX Tyrone 10 St. Petersburg, Florida April 15, 2016
CMX Daytona 12 Daytona Beach, Florida December 12, 2016
CMX Wellington Wellington, Florida December 15, 2016
CMX CinéBistro CityPlace Doral Doral, Florida March 17, 2017
CMX Brickell Dine-In Miami, Florida April 2017
CMX Market Cinemas Closter Closter, New Jersey January 2018
CMX Fallschase Tallahassee, Florida July 27, 2018
CinéBistro Peachtree Corners Peachtree Corners, Georgia March 8, 2019
CMX CinéBistro Halcyon Alpharetta, Georgia September 27, 2019

References

  1. "Company Overview of Cobb Theatres, LLC". Retrieved 22 February 2016.
  2. Klady, Leonard (June 12, 1997). "Regal set to acquire Cobb". Variety. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  3. "Regal Cinemas to acquire Theater Concern in Alabama". The New York Times. June 12, 1997. Retrieved February 3, 2021.
  4. Brinkmann, Paul. "CMX Cinemas buys Cobb Theatres, including Orlando location". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved 2017-11-20.
  5. "CMX Cinemas files for bankruptcy amid dispute over Star Cinema Grill deal". Houston Business Journal. 2020-04-27.
  6. Rodriguez, Rene (2020-12-03). "The Miami-based CMX movie theater emerges from bankruptcy in an unusual way". Miami Herald.
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