This guide covers the movie theater options accessible from the Quail Springs area in north Oklahoma City, with specific details on screen counts, pricing, and what separates each venue beyond basic amenities. After reading, you'll know which theaters match your preferred format, budget, and neighborhood proximity without wasting a trip across the metro.
Quail Springs is a residential district in northwest Oklahoma City bounded roughly by I-44 to the south and Memorial Road to the north. It sits between two very different cinema experiences. The nearest multiplex is several miles south; the next option requires crossing into the metro's sprawling suburbs. This geography matters if you're choosing between convenience and screen quality.
The most direct option is the Regal theater at Quail Springs Crossing shopping center, located on Hefner Road near Memorial. This 12-screen theater operates as a standard suburban multiplex with stadium seating and digital projection across all auditoriums.
Ticket pricing runs $11.99 for matinees (before 5 p.m.) and $14.99 for evening shows, with senior and child tickets at $10.99 regardless of time. Premium formats like IMAX and Dolby are not available here; all screens show the same 2K digital format. Concession pricing follows national chains: popcorn at small ($6.99), large ($8.99), and extra-large ($10.99), with fountain drinks following similar scaling.
The theater operates daily from 10 a.m. opening for matinees, with last showtimes typically between 10 p.m. and midnight depending on the day. Parking is free and ample, a significant advantage over downtown options. The location works well for families catching weekend matinees or local residents avoiding a longer drive to other multiplexes.
One operational detail: this Regal participates in the chain's rewards program, which offers modest discounts and free concessions after point accumulation. The program is free to join at the box office or via the Regal app.
South of Quail Springs, about 4 miles via Hefner Road or I-44, sits the Cinemark multiplex at Crossroads Mall on W. Memorial Road. This 16-screen theater is slightly larger and newer than the Quail Springs Regal, with all digital projection and a broader range of showtimes.
Cinemark's pricing is marginally different: matinee tickets at $11.99 and evening tickets at $14.99, identical to Regal. However, Cinemark offers an in-house subscription called Movie Club. The basic tier costs $9.99 per month and provides one free movie ticket per month plus 10% concession discounts. For regular moviegoers, this reduces per-visit cost substantially over time.
The Crossroads location has the same free parking advantage as Quail Springs Crossing. It opens at 10 a.m. daily and typically runs until 11 p.m. or midnight. The theater is in an aging shopping mall, which means foot traffic and atmosphere differ noticeably from the newer Quail Springs Crossing center.
Practically speaking, if you're choosing between these two based on price alone, they're equivalent. The decision hinges on whether you anticipate using the Cinemark Movie Club. If you visit a multiplex more than twice monthly, the subscription pays for itself immediately.
Further south and east, near the Penn Square Mall area on W. Memorial Road, the AMC multiplex offers a middle option between suburban multiplexes and Oklahoma City's premium formats. This 14-screen theater uses the same 2K digital projection standard as the others but draws a different audience demographic and has different concession pricing.
AMC's ticket pricing is $13 for matinees and $15.50 for evening shows, the highest of the three. However, AMC's rewards program, called Stubs, offers tiered benefits. The free tier grants occasional bonus points; the paid tier (A-List) costs $19.95 monthly and includes three movie tickets per month, making it valuable only for very frequent viewers.
The Penn Square location is approximately 6 miles from Quail Springs, requiring a 12- to 15-minute drive depending on traffic. It opens at 10 a.m. daily.
If you want IMAX or Dolby Cinema, you must leave the immediate Quail Springs and northwest metro area. The closest option is an AMC IMAX theater at Penn Square or a Cinemark XD screen at another location further south or east. IMAX and XD tickets typically cost $3 to $4 more per ticket than standard formats.
For moviegoers in Quail Springs committed to premium formats, the drive time and added expense (roughly $18 to $19 per ticket instead of $14.99 to $15.50) becomes a consideration. Many action and sci-fi releases are formatted for IMAX; animated films and dramas rarely are. If you attend only a few films per year, the standard digital experience is functionally sufficient.
Start with frequency. If you see fewer than two films monthly at multiplexes, the Regal at Quail Springs Crossing minimizes driving time and offers no hidden costs. If you're a two- to four-films-per-month viewer, calculate whether the Cinemark Movie Club or AMC A-List saves money. For movie subscriptions, Cinemark's lower monthly cost ($9.99) is almost always the better deal unless you're visiting more than three times per month.
Consider format only if you're seeing a specific film you know was shot for or formatted for IMAX or Dolby. Check the film's listing before driving; many releases are standard digital across all venues. For Oklahoma City residents, checking the Cinemark and AMC websites' "formats available" sections takes 30 seconds and clarifies whether the extra drive is necessary.
Distance matters least on weekends, when you're planning an outing anyway. On weeknight visits after work, staying local at Quail Springs Crossing or Crossroads saves 20 minutes round-trip driving.
