Doctor Strange 2 Inspired By Anthony Bourdain And Indiana Jones

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness writer Michael Waldron has revealed some of his inspirations for the upcoming sequel, and they might not be what you’d expect.

He told Vanity Fair that the late chef and traveller Anthony Bourdain and the fictional adventurer Indiana Jones were two of his inspirations for the sequel. Stephen Strange and Bourdain are obviously very different in a lot of ways, but Bourdain had an “intense intellect” not unlike Strange, Waldron said.

“I gravitated toward Anthony Bourdain,” Waldron said. “Strange is an elitist as a neurosurgeon and a sorcerer. Anthony Bourdain was a man of the people, but there was that intense intellect. You always felt like he could eviscerate anybody with his words at any time. But yet, Anthony Bourdain never really punched down. That was the first ingredient in the stew for Doctor Strange.

“Anthony Bourdain had been everywhere, seen everything,” he added. “What surprises you at this point? I think for all of the heroes in the MCU, in a post-Endgame world, how do you rally yourself to fight the stand-alone movie villains after you fought Thanos?”

Waldron was also inspired by Indiana Jones. For Waldron’s money, Doctor Strange is basically “Indiana Jones in a cloak.”

“He’s a hero who can take a punch,” Waldron said. “That’s what made those Harrison Ford heroes so great. Those guys get their asses kicked. Look at Stephen Strange in the first movie. He’s really getting beat up but he’s very capable and everything.”

Waldron’s friend, Rick and Morty’s Jeff Loveness, remarked that Waldron wanted to write a “really great Indiana Jones-esque blockbuster,” and that’s what he said he achieved with In the Multiverse of Madness.

What’s more, Waldron spoke about the pressure he feels to give Elizabeth Olsen’s Wanda Maximoff a good story in the Doctor Strange sequel. “I just wanted to make sure I wasn’t gonna let my friend down,” he said of WandaVision creator Jac Schaeffer. “I can’t sh** the bed because she did such a great job. So we had a lot of conversations. Getting to continue Wanda’s story was amazing.”

In other news, Waldron also recently said that In the Multiverse of Madness is “visually thrilling” and will be “unlike anything you’ve seen in the MCU before.”

In the Multiverse of Madness comes to theaters in 2022. It’s directed by Spider-Man’s Sam Raimi, who took over for Scott Derrickson after he dropped out due to creative differences.

Watch live streams, videos, and more from GameSpot’s summer event. Check it out

History Of E3 (Updated 2021)

For the last two decades, some of the biggest gaming news and reveals have come during the Electronic Entertainment Expo or E3. the yearly video game industry trade show, where the newest titles and products are on full display. Many for the first time. But even though the show has drawn 10s of thousands of people to its convention centers every summer, the show itself has gone through a whole lot of changes during this 27 year-long run… well, 26 if you exclude the canceled one last year. So let’s take a look back at the history of E3 and maybe laugh at all the dorky 90s outfits.

Critical Role Minis From WizKids Feature Some Incredible Monsters

The world of Critical Role is coming to the real world in miniature form thanks to WizKids, which can help elevate your Dungeons & Dragons games. Recently hitting store shelves, there are plenty of beasts and characters you may want to add to your collection, including a 10-inch tall one.

The collaboration between WizKids and Critical Role was announced back in January, bringing some highly-detailed figures to your home. Outside of some of the monsters in these new sets, there are the Clovis Concord & Menagerie Coast Box Set ($65), Dwendalian Empire Box Set ($50), and Kryn Dynasty & Xhorhas Box Set ($50).

However, if you’re a fan of new monsters for your players to fight, check out some of them from the new line below.

For more information on all these beasts–like hit points, AC, etc–you can get all their stats in Dungeons & Dragons: Explorer’s Guide to Wildemount. All the info is in there, and it’s currently on sale on Amazon for $23. It’s a solid addition to your D&D gaming if you want to run a Critical Role campaign.

Additionally, you can get a closer look at some of the monsters of Wildemount below, one of which gives you a better idea as to the scale of Udaak–it’s huge.

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For more on WizKids minis, check out a closer look at the Wild Shape and Polymorph sets, Boneyard minis, two gigantic dragons, and the Warlock tile sets, which lets you build your own towns and dungeons. For more from the world of Dungeons & Dragons, we have a breakdown of one of the most interesting monsters from the recently released Van Richten’s Guide to Ravenloft.

Watch live streams, videos, and more from GameSpot’s summer event. Check it out

Battlefield 6 Screenshots Apparently Leak, Show Off Gameplay

EA and DICE will formally announce the new Battlefield game on June 9, but ahead of that, what appears to be some screenshots from the military shooter have emerged.

The images were posted to Imgur. They show off what may be the first look at gameplay, and perhaps most notably, the images seem to suggest that the game is set in the modern day or near future, as had been rumored. One of the images contains a disclaimer about pre-alpha footage, so even if these images are real, they may not be representative of the final product. One particularly dramatic image shows what looks like a sandstorm overtaking a city; another screen shows a player in a tank moving through a city at night.

The Battlefield series hasn’t featured modern-day combat since 2015’s Battlefield Hardline, as Battlefield 1 and Battlefield V took place during World War I and WWII respectively.

EA has begun to tease the new Battlefield game by sending a viral message to influencers that says, “War is the only way home.”

The new Battlefield game, whatever it’s called, will be formally announced on June 9. It remains to be seen if it will show up at E3 2021 days later, however. Electronic Arts is not formally attending the show, instead opting to host its own EA Play Live event in July.

A rumor has suggested that the new Battlefield game could come to Xbox Game Pass. In that case, and if it’s at E3, it could potentially show up at the Xbox briefing–but this is only speculation.

EA CEO Andrew Wilson recently hyped the game, saying, “I think it’s going to be huge. Battlefield is such a great franchise. It’s been a number of years since we’ve been in the market with that game.”

The biggest development team in franchise history is working on the new Battlefield, with DICE, DICE LA, EA Gothenburg, and Criterion working on the title. EA management has said the game could have more of a live service element that before.

In addition to the new Battlefield game for console and PC, EA’s Industrial Toys studio is creating the franchise’s first mobile game for release in 2022.

In other news, the Activision executive who helped launch Call of Duty: Warzone has left the publisher to become the new boss of Battlefield at EA.

Watch live streams, videos, and more from GameSpot’s summer event. Check it out

The 15 Best Marvel Easter Eggs In Disney’s Avengers Campus

Avengers Campus is finally open at the Disneyland Resort’s Disney California Adventure. With a new ride, plenty of character experiences, and a long list of foods to try, it should keep anyone visiting pretty busy for the duration of their stay. For eagle-eyed Marvel fans, though, there’s a whole other layer of immersion thanks to a surprising amount of Easter eggs hidden throughout the land.

Obviously, when it comes to Marvel, you expect hidden references to various corners of the universe. At Avengers Campus, though, everywhere you look there is probably a secret nod to something–and not even just other Marvel characters.

The land is filled with a variety of Easter eggs referencing MCU movies, but also Pixar and Disney movies, as well as retired Disney theme park rides and experiences. There are so many, in fact, that it would be nearly impossible to catalog them all unless you had the land to yourself for months on and to go over every inch with a microscope.

GameSpot sadly didn’t have months. However, we did get the chance to visit the expansion during a media preview and were able to find a number of well-hidden and very fun Easter eggs. Take a look at the 15 best we could find below. Then, when you visit Avengers Campus yourself, let us know in the comments what your favorites are.

Avengers Campus is open now at Disney California Adventure.

1. An Avengers-sized snack

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The Shawarma cart in Avengers Campus is an Easter egg unto itself, nodding back to the post-credits meal the heroes enjoyed in the first Avengers film. However, the cart is also covered in newspaper clippings, notes, and photos referencing a number of things in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, so study it carefully.

2. Damage Control

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Spread around Avengers Campus are crates marked “Damage Control.” That, of course, is a group referenced in both Agents of SHIELD and Spider-Man: Homecoming–they’re the government operatives that arrive to clear up the alien wreckage at the beginning of the movie.

3. Miles Morales

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Though he’s yet to appear in the MCU, Miles Morales is one of the most popular Marvel characters around these days (thanks to Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse). And he’s also a student at the Worldwide Engineering Brigade (WEB), which is home to the new Spider-Man ride, it turns out. On the side of the WEB Slingers building is a massive piece of graffiti with Miles’ tag on it.

4. Remnants of SSR

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There is a story behind Avengers Campus. In the land’s canon, the location was originally a Stark Industries complex that also happened to serve as a base of operations for the Strategic Scientific Reserve. The SSR was a precursor to SHIELD that was created to battle HYDRA and included members like Howard Stark, Peggy Carter, and Edwin Jarvis. While the SSR is long gone, you’ll still see some of their markings left on buildings if you’re paying close enough attention.

5. The parking spots

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There are a few places around the campus still marked from the compound’s SSR days, including parking spaces for Peggy, Howard, and Jarvis. You’ll have to go out of your way to find them, though.

6. A claw machine stuffed with Easter eggs

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In the pre-show area for WEB Slingers, there’s a claw machine on the left side of the room. In it are a number of Easter eggs, including a Captain Marvel Funko Pop, a Big Hero Six Baymax toy, a tiny green alien from Toy Story, and a pair of 3D glasses from It’s Tough to Be a Bug, the primary attraction from A Bug’s Land–which was closed in 2018 to make room for Avengers Campus.

7. The LEGO Death Star

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Also in the pre-show, you may notice a LEGO Death Star on a shelf. In theory, that’s the same one Peter and Ned were building in Spider-Man: Homecoming.

8. These WEB kids look familiar

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You may also recognize some of the WEB kids working on WEB Slingers. Obviously, Peter Parker is involved. However, you can also see that Harley Keener (the kid from Iron Man 3) is there, along with some new (but very familiar) characters. In the comics, Lunella Lafayette is Moon Girl, Doreen Green is Squirrel Girl, and Onome is a child prodigy from Wakanda who became a member of the Future Foundation. All of the characters also appear in the ride’s pre-show.

9. Squirrel Girl’s bike

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Since they are students there, it should come as no surprise that their belongings are also laying around. One of the more notable touches is Squirrel Girl’s bike–complete with an acorn-shaped bag–in the bike rack.

10. Harley’s potato gun shenanigans

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In Iron Man 3, Harley showed Tony a super-powered potato gun he built. Evidently, he hasn’t given up on his favorite invention and it’s dangerous enough to warrant a sign in the WEB Slingers line queue.

11. Very colorful lockers

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Elsewhere in the queue, you’ll see a collection of WEB student lockers–many of which belong to a variety of Marvel characters. Among the kids at WEB are the aforementioned Miles Morales, America Chavez (Miss America), Harley Keener, and so many more.

12. Some clever cleaning supplies

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Even the cleaning supplies in WEB Slingers are Easter eggs. There are nods to characters Monkey Joe, Wal Rus, and Goom. Our favorite, though, is the can that says WDI 1401. This is a reference to Walt Disney Imagineering (WDI), with 1401 representing the group’s office address, 1401 Flower Street, Glendale, Ca.

13. A Hawkeye Easter egg

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Hawkeye hasn’t even premiered yet, but there is a nod to the series. As you leave WEB Slingers, check out the sticker above the exit door. Lucky Dog’s Pizza is a reference to Clint Barton’s dog Lucky, who will be seen in the series.

14. A nod to California Adventure’s past

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When getting your condiments at Pym test Kitchen, don’t forget to look up at the giant-sized ketchup and mustard bottles hanging from the ceiling. They are labeled Bountiful Valley Farms, which is a reference to a farming area in the original iteration of Disney California Adventure. It was closed to make way for A Bug’s Land, which itself was demolished to build Avengers Campus.

15. The Incredible Hulk Tree

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We saved the best for last. This particular Easter egg was actually pointed out to GameSpot by a member of Walt Disney Imagineering. The Incredible Hulk tree is on the side of the WEB Slingers building. It’s a massive tree compared to those around it and if you look behind it, you’ll see why. There are gamma radiation pipes on the side of the WEB building, seemingly dumping the substance into the soil. While the young geniuses polluting the soil in Avengers Campus is probably not the best idea, it has resulted in one gigantic tree.

New Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness Art Revealed

A new piece of official art from Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness has been revealed, which features the main cast drawn in the classic style of old-school Marvel comics.

Reportedly given to cast and crew as a gift, the faux comic cover art features Wanda Maximoff in her new Scarlet Witch costume, plus Doctor Strange and his companion in the mystic arts, Wong. And then, on the right of the image, we have what is our first-ish look at the MCU’s America Chavez.

Played by Xochitl Gomez in the upcoming movie, it looks like the MCU’s America will retain the iconic jacket with stars-and-stripes motif. Chavez is often drawn about to throw a punch in Marvel art, too, and that’s captured here.

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Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness is to be directed by Sam Rami, who took over after Scott Derrickson left due to creative difference. The Scarlet Witch link comes via WandaVision, which Doctor Strange was originally set to feature in but was ultimately written out of.

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Matt Purslow is IGN’s UK News and Entertainment Writer.

Daily Deals: RTX 30 Series Gaming PCs “In Stock and Ready to Ship” at Adorama

To say that finding a new RTX 30 series video card at retail price is difficult is a sore understatement. To be honest, the hunt for an RTX 30 series card makes finding a PS5 or Xbox Series X a cakewalk. Instead, getting a prebuilt PC equipped with an RTX 30 series card might be a bit easier, but you usually still have to wait 8 weeks or longer to receive it.

Today, though, there’s a glimmer of hope. Adorama has listed a number of name brand prebuilt PCs with RTX 3060, RTX 3060 Ti, RTX 3070, and RTX 3090 graphics cards that are “in stock and ready to ship” right now. It is very likely that Adorama only has a single digit amount of each unit in stock. There’s even a chance that the stock tracker might not be up to date. But for those of you who need or want instant gratification, it’s worth a shot.

RTX 30 Series Gaming PCs In Stock at Adorama

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More Daily Deals for June 4

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Eric Song is IGN’s deal curator and spends roughly 1/4 of his income on stuff he posts. Check out the IGN Deals articles and subscribe to the IGN Deals Twitter page.

The Flash Director Teases Michael Keaton’s Classic Batman Suit

Andy Muschietti, director of the DCEU’s upcoming The Flash movie, has shared a new image teasing Michael Keaton’s return as Batman.

Muschietti threw up the proverbial Bat-Signal and summoned fans to his Instagram page on Friday when he posted a new photo to his grid, featured right alongside a bunch of previous set photos from The Flash, which officially entered production in April. The latest snap offers a glimpse of Keaton’s classic Batman suit, with a few drops of blood splashed across the iconic black and yellow chest symbol.

Muschietti shared the image without a caption, so details of Keaton’s role in The Flash remain sparse for now. He is, however, one of two Batmen scheduled to appear in the movie, with Ben Affleck also set to reprise his role as Bruce Wayne. Muschietti previously said Affleck would be responsible for delivering “a very substantial part of the emotional impact of the movie.”

Alongside Keaton and Affleck, the cast also includes Ezra Miller as Barry Allen/The Flash, Kiersey Clemons as Iris West, Maribel Verdú as Allen’s mother Nora, and, reportedly, Ron Livingston as Allen’s father, replacing Billy Cudrup who played Allen’s dad in Justice League. Sasha Calle is also set to bring the Girl of Steel back to the big screen, as she’s been cast to play Supergirl in The Flash.

Touted as a version of the classic DC Flashpoint story, the story will apparently “restart everything” in the DC cinematic universe. “It’s going to be fun and exciting and there are a lot of DC characters in it,” said producer Barbara Muschietti. “Flash is the superhero of this film because he is the bridge between all of these characters and timelines. And in a way, it restarts everything and doesn’t forget anything.”

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Meanwhile, Matt Reeves has been working on the next Batman solo film, which is said to start from scratch, with a story set in the second year of the caped crusader’s career. The movie is expected to form part of a trilogy, with the first installment starring Pattinson in the lead role alongside Jeffrey Wright’s Commissioner Gordon, Zoë Kravitz’ Catwoman, Paul Dano’s Riddler, and Colin Farrell’s Penguin.

The Batman was originally scheduled for release on June 25, 2021, but will now debut on March 4, 2022, due to the pandemic. The Flash is scheduled to arrive later in that same year, on November 4, 2022, after being pushed back from its original June 2022 release date. For more changes to the theatrical release calendar, take a look at our round-up of every film and show affected by COVID-19.

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Adele Ankers is a Freelance Entertainment Journalist. You can reach her on Twitter.

New Snake Eyes and Timber G.I. Joe Classified Figures Announced by Hasbro

Hasbro’s G.I. Joe Classified line of 6-inch figures is getting an updated take on its Snake Eyes figure, by way of a Snake Eyes and Timber: Alpha Commandos two-pack coming July 1.

Snake Eyes, if you’re unaware, is generally agreed upon as the coolest G.I. Joe member, with his ninjitsu training and super-secret commando background. Timber is Snake Eyes’ loyal pet wolf, which adds another facet of amazingness to this already legendary Joe.

Check out the slideshow below to see Timber and Snake Eyes in their latest forms:

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This isn’t Snake Eyes’ first appearance in the G.I. Joe Classified line, nor is it his first special-edition. The original Classified series line-up featured a special-edition Snake Eyes with weapons rack and other assorted goodness. Best believe I bought that one when it was available.

The new Snake Eyes and Timber G.I. Joe Classified collector’s pack can be preordered for $39.99 beginning June 10 at 1 PM ET, and will be available “July 1, 2021 at select toy retailers,” according to Hasbro.

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Seth Macy is IGN’s Executive Editor, IGN Commerce, and just wants to be your friend. You can follow him on Twitter.

What The Hell Is Going on With AMC?

It’s a good time to be an AMC investor. Or, depending on what you read, it may soon be a very bad time. 

This past week, AMC has seen its stock jump tenfold as retail investors (those are the everyday people who buy shares of a company on an app like Robinhood instead of financial institutions) jumped to buy a flood of stock made available by an investment firm. Here’s the tl;dr: A firm called Mudrick Capital bought 8.5 million AMC shares valued at about $230 million. Mudrick Capital then turned around and immediately sold those shares back to the retail investors who were clamoring for a bigger piece of AMC after a successful long weekend for movies like A Quiet Place Part II and Cruella. 

By the end of Wednesday, hundreds of millions of shares were exchanged and AMC stock was halted several times due to wild activity. The power of Reddit. It’s a beautiful and terrifying thing. Ironically, if Mudrick had waited one more day, the firm would have made hundreds of millions of dollars more.

Capitalizing on the movement, AMC sold even more stock to those same hungry retail investors just two days later. Now there’s a question about whether or not AMC will start to run low on available shares to sell. Finance!

Folks who remember GameStop’s stock mania in January and February will see similar patterns. But unlike GameStop, which never really leaned into the online circus of it all, AMC is diving head first into this new batch of shareholders. CEO Adam Aron is tweeting more (to connect with his new owners), appearing on YouTube shows (to connect with his new owners), and donating to a gorilla preservation wildlife fund (to connect with his new owners, who embraced the specific animal because of an ape meme). 

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It’s all fun and games — until the speculative market comes crashing down. The question is will that happen? While GameStop’s financial rollercoaster was more in line with people buying and dumping shares because they wanted to participate in the “meme stock,” AMC’s buyers seem more convinced that AMC is going to have a massive resurgence. They seem to believe, as reports in the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg have pointed out, that AMC can become a giant once again. 

Trying to understand where AMC exists as a business beyond startling figures and beyond the memes, is key. Was AMC a stable business before the pandemic? Are AMC’s biggest threats — streaming — still present? Look, it’s a complicated issue that the best minds in finance and entertainment are trying to understand. We’re not going to figure out if it’s a “good” or a “bad” buy by the end of this column, but we are going to understand AMC’s foundation a little more. 

There are three components to think about:

  1. Theater attendance over the last 30 years 

  2. AMC’s growing competition in the streaming space 

  3. Potential profit versus the debt its carrying 

Theater Attendance Is Down Even if Ticket Sales Are Up 

I should preface this by saying that I don’t think theaters are dying out, nor do I think this is a story that ends with an entire industry saying goodbye to cinemas. At all. I like theaters — a lot. 

That said, there are some metrics that are impossible to ignore. Theater attendance per capita hit the lowest point in nearly 100 years, as Bloomberg reported in 2019. Theatergoers actually went to the movies on average about three-and-a-half times in 2019, the article added. This makes it the lowest on average attendance since 2002. And that was before the pandemic hit. 

Now, while theatrical attendance was down on average, revenue from ticket sales has steadily climbed. Experts chalk this up to the type of movie people are going to see. 

With Netflix, Disney+, HBO Max, Peacock, Paramount+, Discovery+, Apple TV+, Amazon Prime Video, Hulu, and about a few other dozen streaming services — not to mention TikTok, YouTube, or Fortnite — there are more options to be entertained at home. They also tend to be cheaper (sometimes downright free) and, as Walt Disney Studios chief creative officer Alan Horn told the Hollywood Reporter in February 2020, people aren’t dealing with a sick person on their right and someone texting on their left. 

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If people are leaving their house to watch a movie, meaning they’re taking a 25-minute subway ride or sitting in traffic for half an hour and paying $100 to see something with their family, the movie better be worth it. These tend to be massive blockbusters that belong to a franchise series they already know and love. The return on their investment (that $100) is likely going to be pretty good. Avengers: Endgame, Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, Fate of the Furious…you get the picture. 

The good news is that 2021’s latter half is full of exactly these types of movies. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, Venom: Let There Be Carnage, No Time to Die, Ghostbusters: Afterlife, Top Gun: Maverick, Spider-Man: No Way Home, West Side Story, and The Matrix 4 are all due out this year. For AMC investors who may wholeheartedly believe that people will return to theaters in droves, it’s a good sign. These are the types of movies people want to see, according to data. 

One of the bigger issues that bears (an investor term used to describe someone who doesn’t believe a company can succeed) often bring up is that AMC can’t just return to average pre-pandemic business norms. Those weren’t exactly great. Prior to AMC’s stock mania, the company was just staving off bankruptcy, collecting billions in debt, closing theaters and laying off employees. 

AMC’s current enterprise value is more than $40 billion. A few days ago, it was $15.6 billion. At the end of 2019, it was $5.8 billion. That’s a massive increase in valuation despite AMC having the worst year on record in 2020. This means the stock could be overvalued, which could drastically impact investors — those same investors buying into AMC, whether because they believe in the power of movie theaters or because they simply love a good meme. That’s not just analysts saying it, either; it’s AMC.

“And to the extent these valuations reflect trading dynamics unrelated to our financial performance or prospects, purchasers of our Class A common stock could incur substantial losses if there are declines in market prices driven by a return to earlier valuations,” AMC executives noted in public documents on Tuesday

Or, simply put, because the stock being bought isn’t reflective of the company’s actual financial reality, if AMC returns to its previous value, shareholders could lose out on a lot of money. Key word: could. It’s mostly reliant on consumer behavior, a term that companies like Disney warned shareholders at the beginning of the pandemic was something they couldn’t predict. 

Considering that AMC is a business reliant on movies (it doesn’t even own all the land its theaters are built on) the only thing that prevents this from happening is people returning in droves. 

Studios Are Friends and Competitors 

Good news: Studios need theaters. Bad news: Studios don’t need theaters as much.

The majority of theaters revenue comes from four studios: Disney (now with Fox under its wing), Warner Bros. (now part of a new combined company with Discovery), Universal, and Sony. Paramount and Lionsgate have some market share globally, but it’s really those aforementioned four. 

As part of Disney’s strategy, the company is moving some 20th Century and Searchlight Pictures movies to Hulu. Other Disney live-action films that may have gone to theaters will likely move to Disney+ as part of Premier Access. Warner Bros. is releasing its 2021 films on HBO Max and in theaters on the same day. Universal is moving some of its 2021 movies, including Boss Baby 2, to Peacock for people to stream at home at no extra cost. Sony is partnering with Netflix to produce some exclusive titles for the streaming service. 

Ironically, Netflix is trying to get into theaters. Kind of. 

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Let’s look at the numbers. In 2019, Disney (with Fox) controlled more than 50% of the global box office. That was followed by Warner Bros. with just over 16% of the box office, Universal with just over 12%, and Sony with just over 11%. Thinking of how the theatrical attendance has operated over the last 30 years, it’s not necessarily an issue if Disney moves some of its non-blockbusters to Disney+ or Hulu, but the company is still removing titles from theatrical distribution because it has a streaming service — or two — to feed. 

Streaming is a competitor for AMC due to the restricting of windows (a term used in the industry to simply mean how long a movie plays in a theater) that it is in part causing. Arguably, home video has been a competitor for decades, but whereas studios used to relegate “C-tier” movies to straight DVD releases, the quality of a movie on a streaming service has vastly improved over the last six years. When it was just Netflix, AMC had a leg to stand on. When it’s nearly every studio whose movies drive people to theaters, that leg disappears. It’s why CEO Adam Aron had to cut new deals with studios who wanted to remove their films from AMC theaters after 45 days, or half of the typical exclusivity window. 

“When we couldn’t strike deals with studios on shorter windows, we resisted them with all of our might,” Aron said on a recent earnings call, before the batch of new announcements about shorter windows started being released. “This is an area I feel very good about.”

Everything comes back to this idea that AMC can’t just do as well as it did (which wasn’t superb) pre-pandemic. It has to do better. That’s harder when studios that belong to companies with streaming services are prioritizing those, too. Let’s pose the question this way: If AMC and Disney couldn’t figure out how to work together, who would suffer more? 

Disney could still find ways to distribute its movies in key territories like China while making big blockbusters available exclusively via Disney+ for $40, a $10 increase in Premier Access but still profitable considering the split Disney takes (anywhere from 70 to 100% depending on if distributors like Apple and Amazon take a cut of someone watching Cruella on Disney+ at home through Apple TV or Amazon Fire TV). This is the most extreme example, though. Disney maintains one of the best positions in the market, and Disney wants to be in theaters around the world. And streaming leads to easier, high-resolution piracy. 

There’s no obvious reason for Disney to walk away from AMC, and Disney isn’t about to give up its box office reign, but the above example is just to showcase how power dynamics can shift. So why would retail investors want in on AMC? If we examine GameStop, when retail investors became mass shareholders in the company it was able to “overhaul its management team and raise money to invest in modernizing its business, potentially giving it new life,” according to CNBC. GameStop was also able to get rid of long-term debt, CNBC added, noting that this is something AMC will still face in the years to come. 

AMC shareholders now have quite a bit of power — and the CEO’s ear. They believe in the experience of people going to theaters, and they believe that as case numbers continue to drop and vaccination rates either increase or hold steady, one of the first things consumers will do is visit theaters once again. Apes, as they refer to themselves, are all in on the potential of it all.

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Let’s Talk About Profit vs Debt 

More importantly, there’s a belief among Wall Street analysts that retail investors can modernize AMC’s business, according to CNBC. It becomes less about competing with Disney or Warner Bros. and determining how everyone can work together within the new ecosystem — something Aron has talked about on other earnings calls. 

Maybe if shareholders and management can figure that out, and maybe if the desire to go back to movies in the near and long term is enough to stave off concerns from disbelievers, there’s a chance that AMC lives up to the new stock market hype — but the overarching, big question is will this happen in the time that it needs to happen?

The more that retail investors and redditors drive up AMC’s stock, the more AMC can capitalize on that manic interest and continue to raise funds, as CNBC points out. Can Reddit and the internet at large continue to do that through 2023, when Aron told analysts he’s expecting AMC to become profitable again? Can AMC and its army of investors pull off a Hertz?

Current numbers help explain why many analysts — including the handful who cover AMC — aren’t as optimistic as the Reddit bulls. Aside from the billions of dollars in debt the company took on over the last few years alone, box office numbers dropped about 80% between 2018 and 2020. The former brought in $11.9 billion in the US, while the latter saw a low of $2.1 billion. Obviously, part of this is the pandemic, which retail investors will point to as the “well, d’uh” moment of it all. 

As AMC attempts to go on the offense and acquire more small theater chains and effectively pop up over the United States like little red houses on a Monopoly board, there are also concerns that any attempt to monopolize the market may not come to fruition because of true competition in the space. Regal and Cinemark still exist. They’re probably unlikely to sell to AMC, even as the company sells more shares to raise its initial capital to acquire as much as possible. 

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What retail investors seem to be betting on is potential. Barron’s lays it out nicely: If AMC can continue to increase its market share and the U.S. box office does return to 2018 levels, “total sales might be at $9 billion—$6 billion from tickets and $3 billion from concessions. Sales in 2018 amounted to $5.5 billion.” That’s step one. If all this happens, and AMC has better gross profit margins (a phrase that simply refers to the financial health of a company, and how good said business is at managing its operations), AMC could generate “$600 million in free cash flow annually.”

As it currently stands, analysts believe that 2023 will see AMC achieve free cash flow, according to Barron’s — but $90 million, not $600 million. 

Right now, AMC has to find cold, hard revenue and cash to justify its wild valuation. Redditors and retail investors are hoping this could happen — or maybe they’re hoping the stock price will keep going up enough for them to eventually cash in and walk away, just like the institutional investors before them. 

What’s apparent is how manic the entire situation is. No one really knows what’s going to happen next. AMC could make a resounding comeback. AMC could become a piece of gold for many investors. AMC could welcome in the resurgence of movies going at wildly high levels — remember that Regal went bankrupt in 2002, just before tentpole blockbuster movies really started finding their stride. 

But there’s a good chance that all of this fails, and that’s what’s truly terrifying. Again, that’s not just analysts saying it — it’s AMC, too.