The Option

The Ellison family has sold the Redstone-era Showcase Cinemas chain — 13 theaters across the Northeast and Midwest — to Belgian exhibitor Kinepolis Group for $30 million. The deal is a window into how the new Paramount Skydance ownership structure is rationalizing its inherited assets, and what Kinepolis' aggressive U.S. expansion signals about how European exhibitors are reading the American theatrical market. Key Takeaways: Harbor Lights Entertainment — the Ellison-controlled entity that holds preferred voting stock in Paramount Skydance — sold 13 Showcase Cinemas locations for $30 million.

Show Notes

The Ellison family has sold the Redstone-era Showcase Cinemas chain — 13 theaters across the Northeast and Midwest — to Belgian exhibitor Kinepolis Group for $30 million. The deal is a window into how the new Paramount Skydance ownership structure is rationalizing its inherited assets, and what Kinepolis' aggressive U.S. expansion signals about how European exhibitors are reading the American theatrical market.

Key Takeaways:

  • Harbor Lights Entertainment — the Ellison-controlled entity that holds preferred voting stock in Paramount Skydance — sold 13 Showcase Cinemas locations for $30 million.
  • The theaters generated over $90 million in revenue but only approximately broke even at the theater level, making them a cash-flow neutral asset with no strategic value to a voting-control company.
  • Kinepolis Group, previously concentrated in Michigan, now gains an East Coast presence spanning Rhode Island, New York, Ohio, and Massachusetts in a single acquisition.
  • Kinepolis' CEO explicitly cited real estate redevelopment potential, suggesting the property positions may be as valuable to the buyer as the exhibition business itself.
  • RedBird Capital holds a minority stake in Harbor Lights, meaning it remains tied to the Paramount Skydance governance structure even after the theater sale.
  • LionTree Advisors advised Harbor Lights; EY-Parthenon and PwC advised Kinepolis — a deal advisory roster that reflects both sides' institutional seriousness about the transaction.
  • The Showcase Cinemas brand will continue to operate under its existing name post-acquisition.

This sale completes a clean structural separation inside the Ellison portfolio: voting control over Paramount stays, legacy exhibition assets go. For agents, producers, and executives with Paramount exposure, the signal is that the new ownership is actively optimizing its structure around studio power — not theater real estate. Watch Kinepolis for further U.S. acquisitions as it builds out from Michigan and the East Coast. And watch Harbor Lights for any further asset moves that clarify what the Ellisons consider core to their media strategy.

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