Greg Marcus has been in the movie business for years but he never expected to be urging moviegoers to take out their phones during a film — let alone to be crafting friendship bracelets in preparation for an opening weekend.
But there the chief executive and chair of the Marcus Corporation is in a promotion for his theater chain headquartered in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, stringing beads together while humming “Shake It Off.”
Movie theaters are readying for an onslaught like they’ve never seen before, beginning Friday when Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour debuts. The concert film, compiled from several Swift shows at Southern California’s SoFi Stadium, is expected to launch with $100 million, or possibly more. Advance ticket sales worldwide have already surpassed $100 million.
Swifties will descend. Dancing will be encouraged.
“This is different,” says Marcus. “Take your phone out. Take selfies. Dance, sing, get up, have a good time. We want to create an atmosphere.”
Concert films, of course, aren’t anything new. Just last month, the Talking Heads classic Stop Making Sense returned to theaters for a decades-later encore. But The Eras Tour heralds something new and potentially game-changing in the movie industry.