The Broadway 10 multiplex has closed, leaving Oklahoma City without a dedicated ten-screen cinema in the central retail corridor where it once operated. This shift matters for moviegoers who valued proximity and concentrated programming. Understanding what remains, and how the theatrical landscape has reorganized, helps you find the right venue for your screening habits.
Oklahoma City's first-run cinema capacity is now distributed across three primary multiplexes, each with distinct locations, screen counts, and audience experience.
Cinemark Tinseltown in Midwest City, east of the city proper, maintains the largest concentration of screens in the metro area with 16 theaters. The venue operates a standard commercial multiplex model: new releases across multiple showtimes, stadium seating, and a full concession menu. Matinee pricing runs lower than evening shows, typically $7 to $9 for daytime weekday screenings versus $12 to $14 for evening and weekend slots. The theater anchors the Tinseltown shopping complex off I-44, making it a destination trip rather than a walkable neighborhood venue.
Regal Cinemas operated a location with 18 screens in the Bricktown Entertainment District at the corner of Sheridan Avenue and Reno Avenue, serving downtown's cultural quarter and residential corridor. This theater's closure in 2023 removed convenient first-run access for residents in central Oklahoma City and workers in the Bricktown office and retail zone. The loss reflects a broader contraction in urban multiplex operations nationwide.
Cine Doc Film Festival and Oklahoma Film Institute programs occasionally present theatrical releases and archive films in smaller venues, notably at the Oklahoma History Center and various nonprofit and academic spaces, but these are curated selections rather than commercial first-run theaters.
The Broadway 10 served the Midtown commercial area, occupying retail space designed for high foot traffic and impulse moviegoing. Its closure followed a decade-long pattern of multiplex consolidation. Suburban theaters like Cinemark Tinseltown became the default for wide releases, pulling both audience volume and distributor confidence away from central locations. The pandemic accelerated closures, but the underlying economics had shifted: parking-lot-adjacent multiplexes with 14-16 screens proved more profitable than urban ten-plexes competing for the same titles.
For Oklahoma City residents, this means the casual "let's catch a movie downtown" experience requires planning. Tinseltown in Midwest City is a committed journey. Downtown moviegoing now skews toward film festivals, repertory screenings, and independent programming rather than Saturday night multiplex crowds.
Distance and convenience: Cinemark Tinseltown is approximately 12 miles from downtown Oklahoma City's central core. Driving time from Bricktown is 20-25 minutes depending on traffic direction. There is no public transit connection that makes this trip straightforward during evening hours.
Screen variety: With 16 screens, Tinseltown typically runs 8-12 titles simultaneously, enough to accommodate mainstream releases, family films, and one or two specialty titles per week. During major franchise releases (Marvel, DC, Star Wars), nearly all screens rotate through one or two films across multiple showtimes. During slower weeks, the range narrows further.
Audience environment: Suburban multiplexes draw a different demographic mix than urban theaters. Tinseltown's audience skews younger and family-oriented during matinee and early evening hours, shifting toward adults-only crowds after 9 p.m. Reclining seats are standard in modern auditoriums; confirm specific screen amenities when purchasing tickets.
Pricing structure: Matinees, weekday showings, and Tuesday promotions offer the lowest per-ticket cost. IMAX and premium large formats carry surcharges of $3 to $5 per ticket. Concession prices are standard multiplex rates: $6.50-$8 for popcorn, $5-$7 for drinks, and $4-$6 for candy.
Oklahoma City's arts institutions fill gaps left by multiplex closures through theatrical screenings and festivals.
The Woody Grill Film Festival and occasional series at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art bring curated selections to dedicated audiences. The Criterion Channel and MUBI subscriptions provide streaming alternatives for film enthusiasts who prioritize selection over theatrical format.
Independent and international releases often appear at the Squirt cinema in Norman, a college town 20 miles north, which maintains a smaller commercial multiplex with more diverse programming than Tinseltown's commercial focus.
Without a dedicated ten-screen theater in central Oklahoma City, first-run moviegoing requires traveling to Cinemark Tinseltown in Midwest City or waiting for festival programming at cultural institutions. This represents a real loss of convenience, particularly for downtown residents and workers. If theatrical releases are essential to your entertainment diet, commit to the Tinseltown trip on peak-experience films (large-scale action, sci-fi, animation) where the big screen justifies the drive, and reserve smaller films for streaming when the trade-off feels acceptable.
