Exclusive: Star Cinema Grill to reopen River Oaks Theatre as showcase for indie films

Photo of Cary Darling

The curtain is going up on a new era for the vacated River Oaks Theatre.

Kimco Realty, the Jericho, New York-based company that owns the River Oaks Shopping Center Center where the theater sits, announced Wednesday that the cinema will be re-opening as a showcase for art house and independent films operated by Sugar Land-based Star Cinema Grill, which has eight multiplexes in the Houston suburbs. No date has been set, but it may not open until the end of the year.

Mayor Sylvester Turner made it official with a press conference Wednesday evening in front of the theater. โ€œWhat a great day for the city of Houston,โ€ said Turner, noting that his office had been flooded with calls and letters about the theater. โ€œThe River Oaks Theater is open again and will be preserved for future generations.โ€

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The announcement of Star Cinema Grill as the new tenant comes almost a year after talks broke down during lease negotiations between the former River Oaks Shopping Center landlord, Weingarten Realty, and California-based movie chain Landmark Theaters. The Art Deco venue at 2009 W. Gray, built in 1939 and the last of the vintage movie theaters in Houston still being used for its original purpose, shuttered on March 25, 2021, sending shock waves through the regionโ€™s film and architecture communities.

โ€œI wasnโ€™t sure we would ever get to this place,โ€ said council member Abbie Kamin, whose District C includes the River Oaks Theatre, at the press conference.

While the three-screen River Oaks is like nothing else in Star Cinema Grillโ€™s cinematic portfolio โ€” the companyโ€™s other theaters, such as the 10-screen Springwoods theater that opened in 2019, are sprawling, modern multiplexes located outside the Loop โ€” Star Cinema Grill vice president of development Jason Ostrow says the plan is to keep the River Oaks as filmgoers remember it.

โ€œStar Cinema Grill is a Top 10 blockbuster movie chain. Weโ€™re playing top 10 product, and thatโ€™s our business, and thereโ€™s not a lot of programming creativity that goes into that,โ€ he said in an interview earlier this week. โ€œThis is going to be much more of what it was before, finding that specialty content, specialty events and live theater events in a mixed-use venue. Star Cinema Grill is more of the business side, and this will be more of the passion side.โ€

Star Cinema Grill president and CEO Omar Khan has a special fondness for the River Oaks, Ostrow said. โ€œHeโ€™s a local Houstonian. His family has been in the movie theater business for a very, very long time,โ€ he said. โ€œSo this is almost kind of like a legacy project for Omar, something that he can keep in his family and pass down, nurture and curate.โ€

โ€œThe plan is to keep the soul of the theater,โ€ Khan said at the press conference.

1930s look, 2020s feel

Kimco, which bought out Weingarten last year, wants to turn the shopping center into a recreational destination.

โ€œItโ€™s a place where people on a Saturday will say, โ€˜Hey, letโ€™s go to River Oaks.โ€™ Not necessarily, โ€˜Letโ€™s go to a movieโ€™ or โ€˜Letโ€™s go to this restaurant or that restaurantโ€™ but โ€˜Letโ€™s go to River Oaks,โ€™โ€ said Andrew Bell, Kimcoโ€™s vice-president of leasing. โ€œWeโ€™re trying to do things that promote that going forward โ€ฆ (The theater) plays very well into what our overall vision is for River Oaks.โ€

Kimco, which has a 10-year lease with renewal options with Star Cinema Grill, never had plans to put another form of retail in the building or tear it down. โ€œI never considered it not to be a theater,โ€ said Bell, who grew up in Atlanta and remembers the fight to save the iconic Fox Theater in that city.

The River Oaks will remain a three-screen venue, though the remodeling will include new, larger seats that will probably lessen its capacity. โ€œThe decor will feel like youโ€™re in 1930, but itโ€™s going to feel very new and updated and fresh,โ€ Ostrow said. โ€œSo weโ€™re designing custom-made seats for this facility that are only going to be in River Oaks.โ€

The plan also includes a live stage. โ€œWeโ€™re going to try to find some other uses within the space for other programming opportunities,โ€ Ostrow said. โ€œThose are all things that are still being hashed out, planned and investigated to whatโ€™s actually possible within that space.โ€

While the movie-exhibition business has suffered during the pandemic, Ostrow is not concerned about the River Oaksโ€™ ability to draw a crowd.

โ€œOur business at Star Cinema Grill, weโ€™re up over 120 percent over 2019,โ€ he said. โ€œNow, we are seeing certain parts of demographics that havenโ€™t come back to movies yet fully, but the bulk of our business has returned, plus some.โ€

Star Cinema Grill, which has multiplexes in Richmond, Cypress, Spring, College Station, Vintage Park, Missouri City, Baybrook and Conroe, recently expanded beyond Texas with two locations in suburban Chicago.

โ€˜A big winโ€™

The outcome pleases Greg Audel, a local filmmaker who lives in the neighborhood and just happened to be walking by when he noticed the commotion in front of the theater. โ€œItโ€™s just a wonderful venue to rent for special events or fundraisers because it is a special place. Itโ€™s not just walking into a shopping-mall theater,โ€ he said. โ€œYou come here and you feel like youโ€™re coming to an event.โ€

Also satisfied is The Friends of the River Oaks Theatre, an activist group formed in the wake of the theaterโ€™s closure that includes Richard Linklater, Wes Anderson and Bun B. The group had made its own pitch to Kimco to operate the theater.

โ€œItโ€™s a big win,โ€ said Maureen McNamara, a co-founder of the organization, noting that Feb. 2 marks the anniversary of the groupโ€™s first meeting. โ€œFor these guys to be sincerely planning on keeping the theater an art house, I think thatโ€™s important for the theater.โ€

She hopes that the Friends of the River Oaks Theatre can still be involved somehow.

โ€œItโ€™s still kind of an evolving situation because everybodyโ€™s still figuring out however all the pieces fit together,โ€ she said. โ€œBut itโ€™s like when somebody has half the ingredients to make a cake, and the other person has the other half the ingredients to make a cake โ€ฆ Working together we could help do something really amazing.โ€

cary.darling@chron.com

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