Marcus West End Cinema

1621 West End Boulevard,
St. Louis Park, MN 55416

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Marcus Theatres (Official)

Additional Info

Operated by: Marcus Theatres

Previously operated by: Kerasotes Theatres, Showplace ICON

Functions: Movies (First Run)

Previous Names: Showplace ICON Theatre at West End

Phone Numbers: Box Office: 612.568.0375

Nearby Theaters

Marcus West End Cinema

This is a brand new cinema which opened November 20, 2009 in the Shops at the West End center at Park Place Boulevard and W. 16th Street. It boosts all reserved seating, VIP seating for the over 21s, a full bar, and food. Screens are said to be the size of the mini IMAX, and of course stadium seating. It was closed on June 30, 2024.

It was taken over by Marcus Cinemas and reopened on July 8, 2024 as the Marcus West End Cinema.

Contributed by Kirk Besse

Recent comments (view all 9 comments)

KJB2012
KJB2012 on December 8, 2009 at 12:19 pm

Official opening date was 20. Nov 2009.

northstar16
northstar16 on April 11, 2013 at 11:17 pm

A 2010 photo I took of the theatre:

Link

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on September 18, 2016 at 9:36 am

Technically, it’s run by Kerasotes ShowPlace Icon Theatres formerly operated by Kerasotes Theatres

rivest266
rivest266 on January 17, 2017 at 2:29 am

November 20th, 2009 grand opening ad in the photo section.

dallasmovietheaters
dallasmovietheaters on July 2, 2024 at 6:51 am

Officially closed as the ShowPlace ICON on June 30, 2024 as the 1909-created exhibitor left the theatrical space. It did find a home for this location, however, in a deal with Marcus Cinemas announced on June 28, 2024. It was renamed as the Marcus West End Cinema at its relaunch on July 8, 2024.

rivest266
rivest266 on July 4, 2024 at 4:59 pm

2024 grand opening ad posted.

ridethectrain
ridethectrain on July 3, 2026 at 8:33 pm

In St. Louis Park, a Silver Screen Switcheroo The Showplace Icon Theatre at the Shops at West End is changing hands. It’s emblematic of a wider shift in the movie theater business. By Dan Niepow July 03, 2024 It’s gotten much harder to run a movie theater these days. Especially if you’re a small, family-owned operator.

For those paying close attention to the industry, the recent ownership change at the Showplace Icon Theatre & Kitchen doesn’t really come as a surprise. Late last week, Milwaukee-based Marcus Corp. – the fourth largest theater chain in the nation – announced that it’s taking over the Showplace Icon in St. Louis Park’s Shops at West End.

The place formally closed on June 30, but Marcus is aiming for a quick turnaround and plans to reopen July 8.

Mark Gramz, president of Marcus Theatres, said his company is working with Hempel Real Estate Group – which bought Shops at West End in late 2022 – on a “smooth transition.”

“That’s a rapid transition between operators,” Gramz said in a phone interview with TCB. During the brief closure, Gramz said that Marcus has been busy updating signage and preparing to roll out several promotional programs, such as its daily $7 matinees for seniors and children.

Gramz said his team was aware that Chicago-based Kerasotes Theatres – which operates just four Showplace Icon theaters throughout the U.S. – had been struggling financially, “as we all kind of have been.” Kerasotes, which sold off a big part of its business to AMC more than a decade ago, is now closing all four of its remaining theaters, film industry news site IndieWire reported this week.

“It’s been a struggle for everyone,” Gramz said.

But the St. Louis Park theater also marked a new opportunity for Marcus. The company operates seven theaters in total in Minnesota, and only three are in the Twin Cities metro. Those locations are all in farther-flung suburbs: Rosemount, Shakopee, and Oakdale.

“From a geographical point of view, we’ve been east and south, and now we’re closer to Minneapolis on the west side,” Gramz said. “We’re excited to be there.”

In terms of size, Kerasotes and Marcus are markedly different companies. Marcus is publicly traded, and, per its 2023 annual report, the company operated 79 theaters across the country at the end of last year. Marcus Corp. also runs a separate hotel business.

Eric Wold, a San Francisco-based senior analyst at B. Riley Securities who monitors the movie theater business, said that Kerasotes’ challenges are “not unique.” He pointed to the recent sale of the Alamo Drafthouse chain to Sony Pictures.

Many smaller, family-run theater chains already struggled a lot during pandemic, he noted. Pandemic-related assistance, meanwhile, has run out. Then, theater operators were hit with a “double whammy:” the Hollywood writers’ and actors’ strikes last year, which significantly cut down on the number of new titles to show.

Wold said he wouldn’t be surprised if more smaller operators get scooped up by larger, publicly traded companies in the future. AMC has done several already, he noted.

There’s evidently still value left in movie theaters in shopping malls, especially for unique properties like Showplace Icon. When the Shops at West End opened in 2009, the Showplace Icon Theatre “was one of the very earliest bar/movie theater renovations,” Mpls.St.Paul Magazine’s Stephanie March noted last week.

Wold said that in these cases, “landlords don’t have a lot of options.”

“We’re out of the time period where you’ve got big-box retailers at shopping malls,” he said. “If a movie theater closes, there’s really not much you can put in its place, so your best option is to try to renegotiate a lease with someone else who wants to take it over.”

While it’s been a struggle for small movie theaters, it hasn’t exactly been smooth sailing for the big dogs, either. For its part, Marcus reported a $12 million loss in 2022, though it did net a profit in the following year. Wold said that Marcus’s movie theater business is still well below pre-pandemic levels, though its hotel arm has improved considerably.

Much like patrons of the performing arts, many movie theatergoers simply fell out of the habit over the pandemic.

The Fourth of July weekend, meanwhile, is generally seen as a big moneymaker for movie theaters, which makes the timing of Kerasotes’ exit puzzling. But it’s possible the company’s lease expired, and it didn’t really have a choice.

Industry wide, Wold doesn’t expect box office revenues to begin growing again until the fourth quarter of the year and into 2025. “It’s tough for these smaller theater chains to push through until that point, especially if they’re built for a much larger box office in the past,” he said.

ridethectrain
ridethectrain on July 3, 2026 at 10:44 pm

Please update, total seats 2,651

Seating Capcity:

Theatre 1 412 Big Screen Entertainment

Theatre 2 382 Big Screen Entertainment

Theatre 3 132

Theatre 4 115

Theatre 5 279

Theatre 6 107

Theatre 7 135

Theatre 8 148

Theatre 9 211

Theatre 10 129

Theatre 11 112

Theatre 12 170

Theatre 13 138

Theatre 14 151

Note: Big Screen Entertainment is basically ICON X, Marcus hasn’t rebranded it SuperScreen as of today.

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