"Chestnut Hill movie complex aims for upscale comfort" by Gail Waterhouse | Globe Correspondent, June 15, 2013
The Showcase Cinemas SuperLux in Chestnut Hill is not your typical movie-going experience. An employee in a crisp, all-black uniform greets patrons at the door, ushering them into a lobby that looks more like an upscale hotel than a movie theater.
There, a circular concierge desk sits under a large faux chandelier. A sleek bar and lounge area fills the space where lines for soda and candy usually stretch. Large touch screens stand to the side.
And just wait until you get into the theater.
This week, the Norwood-based theater chain National Amusements opened this top-of-the line theater in the newly redeveloped Newton shopping center, The Street. For $28, moviegoers can experience the “SuperLux” life, reclining in plush seats with footrests, browsing appetizers, entrees, and drinks from an iPad, and merely pressing a call button to order food — before and during the flick.
Popcorn is served on a tray, drinks in fine stemware. Pinkies extended, please.
“It’s like a hotel you can watch movies in,” said Michael Elysee, a host at the theater.
The SuperLux is the latest upscale theater to open in the Boston area. National Amusements already has Cinema de Lux theaters in Dedham, Randolph, and Revere, with added amenities like better seats, food, and drinks. But top-shelf treatment in these theaters is limited to one small section, and the amenities don’t quite match SuperLux’s.
Seats, for example, are plush, but they don’t recline or include foot rests.
Movie theater owners have long promoted the film-going experience against watching on DVDs, streaming video, and in home entertainment centers.
I must admit, the full screen is still an advantage that they have. Now if they would just stop churning out such crap.
The amenities at SuperLux and similar movie houses represent an escalation in the competition, said Sam Craig, director of the entertainment, media, and technology program at New York University’s Stern School of Business.
“The market is segmented. People want a more elite experience,” he said. “Theaters are finding ways to enhance the experience, but for a segment that’s willing to pay more.”
On second thought, I don't want to go to the movies.
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Looks like a good film!