A HUGE new cinema chain could launch in UK – as a former Cineworld boss plots a comeback after the firm went bankrupt.
Mooky Greidinger’s Cineworld empire was buried under a pile of debts during the covid-19 pandemic.
Cineworld boss Mooky Greidinger in one of the struggling chain’s venues[/caption]He is now reportedly mulling plans for a new chain which would take over some of Cineworld’s 100 venues across Britain and Ireland.
The tycoon recently flew into the UK for talks with some of Cineworld’s landlords.
But some of the landlords are reportedly fuming over demands for rent cuts.
They are said to face a choice between going along with the cuts or booting out Cineworld.
Six closures have already been announced as Cineworld undergoes brutal “restructuring”.
A source close to Greidinger told The Sunday Times: “We intend to come back.”
Cineworld collapsed into administration in July last year after piling up a £4billion debt pile.
A group of Wall Street hedge funds led by Travelodge owner GoldenTree seized control of the cinema chain.
Nine of the chain’s UK landlords are local councils, some of which face big financial problems of their own.
Greidinger is widely seen as one of the biggest cinema supremos of his generation.
He joined his family’s Israel-focused cinema chain in the 1970s before expanding it into central Europe.
Cineworld rocketed into the FTSE 100 after borrowing huge sums to fund a $3.6billion (£2.74billion) takeover of US chain Regal in 2017.
The chain then agreed a $2.1billion ($1.6billion) takeover of Canadian chain Cineplex in 2020.
But the huge deal fell apart as cinemas shut at the start of the covid-19 lockdown.
Cineworld ranked as the world’s second-biggest cinema chain at its peak.
The chain has now been broken up into regional chunks after filing for bankruptcy in the US.
CINEWORLD isn't the only chain that's struggling.
Odeon confirmed it would close five of its branches in May last year.
Empire Cinema also closed multiple sites in 2023 after falling into administration in July of the same year.
The company made the decision following “a thorough assessment of all available options”.
The hospitality sector has been struggling too.
In April, family favourite restaurant chain Whitbread revealed it was set to shut more than 200 locations and axe 1,500 jobs.
It shared the plans in its full year results, saying it planned to convert 112 restaurants into hotel extensions while closing 126 “loss-making” venues.
Pub giant Wetherspoons has been closing boozers across the UK too, and Byron Burger fell into administration last year.
In March, pizza giant Papa Johns said it would close dozens of locations.