IMAX Could Be Headed for a Big Change As Reports of a Potential Sale Surface

Credits: Universal Pictures
Credits: Universal Pictures
For decades, the towering screens of IMAX represented the ultimate moviegoing flex in Hollywood. Now, the company itself may be entering a dramatic new act. Reports this week revealed that IMAX has quietly begun early-stage conversations with potential buyers, placing one of cinema’s most recognizable brands at the center of industry speculation.
The timing is notable. Premium large format theaters are thriving again after years of post pandemic uncertainty, and IMAX has become one of the few exhibition brands still capable of turning a theatrical release into an “event.”
Why Hollywood suddenly wants IMAX again
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According to reports first published by The Wall Street Journal, IMAX has held preliminary talks with possible suitors, although the process remains in its earliest phase and may not result in a sale. The market reacted instantly. Shares surged more than 10 percent after the news broke, continuing a sharp rise from the mid-teens just two years ago. The renewed interest is tied directly to the changing economics of moviegoing.
Premium large formats now command a much larger share of box office revenue than they did before the pandemic. Wall Street Journal data noted that premium screens accounted for roughly 16 percent of ticket sales in North America earlier this year, compared to 13 percent in 2021. IMAX alone represented 5.2 percent of domestic box office revenue last year. That momentum has been powered by spectacle-driven releases.
Ryan Gosling’s Project Hail Mary became a major IMAX success story after vastly outperforming internal projections. IMAX reported a $28 million opening weekend haul globally for the sci-fi epic, with the company expecting a record $1.4 billion global box office year in 2026. Upcoming titles like Avatar: Fire and Ash, The Adventures of Cliff Booth, and Dune: Part Three are expected to continue that streak.
Modern blockbuster filmmaking has essentially revived the IMAX business model. Audiences no longer leave home for every movie. They leave home to scale.
Christopher Nolan and the IMAX obsession driving the future
No filmmaker has shaped IMAX’s modern identity more than Christopher Nolan. His upcoming epic, The Odyssey, is already being treated like a cinematic pilgrimage months before release. Tickets for select IMAX 70MM screenings reportedly sold out a year in advance, an unprecedented move for a major studio release.
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Nolan has consistently pushed IMAX camera technology further with every project, from practical large-format photography to expanded aspect ratio sequences designed specifically for giant screens. Industry reports around The Odyssey suggest the film was engineered heavily around IMAX presentation formats, including IMAX 70MM exhibition. That technical ambition matters because filmmakers like Nolan have effectively transformed IMAX into a storytelling language rather than a luxury add-on.
Whether IMAX ultimately finds a buyer or remains independent, one reality is clear. The format has regained cultural importance at exactly the moment Hollywood desperately needs theatrical spectacle to survive.
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What do you think about IMAX potentially being sold amid its massive Hollywood resurgence? Share your thoughts.
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Edited By: Itti Mahajan
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