Liam Neeson Personally Welcomes Back New York City Moviegoers

Pop Culture

“Coming to a movie theater for me is like coming home,” Liam Neeson said to ticket buyers of the 7pm screening of The Marksman at the AMC Lincoln Square on Friday night, according to a statement. “I find it sacred. That feeling has never changed,” he continued.

It was the first night of moviegoing in New York City in nearly a year. After months of confusion over why theaters in other states, and then outside the five boroughs, were allowed to open, Governor Andrew Cuomo made the surprise decision in late February that projection booths could open in the Big Apple on March 5.

While some independent theaters were caught unaware by the announcement (the owner of NYU-adjacent Cinema Village found out “like everyone else on the news”) larger chains like AMC were ready to make the date. (Alas, Regal Cinemas is still being ambiguous about reopening, particularly annoying to this writer, as one of their finer multiplexes is but a two-minute walk away.)

But at the AMC Lincoln Square, a theater even Christopher Nolan has praised as one of the best for projection and sound, they didn’t just have new movies, they had movie stars.

“This is one for the diary,” Neeson told The Hollywood Reporter about his decision to greet the fans, even with the 25 percent capacity cap and other social distancing precautions.

The Marksman is directed and co-written by Robert Lorenz, a longtime associate of Clint Eastwood‘s. In it, Neeson plays a retired U.S. Marine on the Mexico-Arizona border who must aid a young boy being pursued by a drug cartel. Critic Evan Saathoff called it “the kind of film you watch on accident more than seek out, but you probably won’t regret the accident.”

At least one fan got a masked pic with the star at the screening.

More Great Stories From Vanity Fair

On With the Show! See the 2021 Hollywood Portfolio
— Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins on The Silence of the Lambs’ Legacy
— X-Rated: The Myths and Legends of Midnight Cowboy
— Michael B. Jordan on Losing Chadwick Boseman
Justice League: The Heartbreaking True Story of the Snyder Cut
— Watch Zendaya Answer the Personality-Revealing Proust Questionnaire 
— Why Mia Farrow Is Still Scared of Woody Allen
Old Hollywood Book Club: Lauren Bacall’s Long, Lucky Life
— From the Archive: Inside Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall’s Legendary Hollywood Romance
— Not a subscriber? Join Vanity Fair to receive full access to VF.com and the complete online archive now.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

‘Sister Wives’ Kody Brown Shares Thoughts Gwendlyn Being Gay
The News Book Riot Covered This Week
Chic and Practical Ways to Store Thanksgiving Leftovers
Revised Bio ‘Under the Ivy’ Captures Kate Bush’s Complexity
Victoria Monet Wore a Floral Set by Kim Shui Studio During a Photoshoot with Her Daughter