Montreal

All Guzzo movie theatres to be shut down, put up for sale

All Guzzo movie theatres will be closed and put up for sale after a Quebec Superior Court judge ordered the transfer of all the chain's assets to a court-appointed trustee.

Quebec Superior Court judge orders transfer of assets to trustee

theatre
Family-owned business Guzzo Cinemas started in Montreal in 1974 before expanding to other parts of Quebec. (CBC)

Montreal's Guzzo movie theatres will be closed and put up for sale after a Quebec Superior Court judge ordered the transfer of all the chain's assets to a court-appointed trustee.

Judge Michel Pinsonnault issued the ruling Wednesday.

The appointed trustee, Raymond Chabot inc., said the best option in order to ensure creditors were paid as much as possible was to shut down all remaining cinemas and sell them. 

The insolvency company received the mandate to liquidate Guzzo Cinema's assets last December, in order to pay back the company's mounting debt. In a November decision, it was revealed the company owes $39 million to CIBC, among other creditors.

The trustee had until Feb. 27 to put together a report on Guzzo Cinema's finances and issue recommendations to the court.

However, by Jan. 22, after the company shuttered two of its nine remaining locations, Raymond Chabot inc. asked the court to broaden its power, considering the group's financial situation "critical and unsustainable."

The company had already closed another location, Cinéma Des Sources, in the West Island, late last year. 

Though Guzzo Cinema's remaining theatres generate revenue, it's not nearly enough to allow the company to make due on its financial obligations, Pinsonnault said in his ruling.

The closure of the two locations in Montreal's Marché Central and in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., also didn't generate additional liquidity.

After the company was put under trusteeship, the court found it incapable of properly managing its finances.

The company would, for example, issue checks, including payroll, without sufficient funds to back them up in the hopes that more money would come in before creditors cashed them, according to the ruling.

Guzzo Cinemas has been struggling financially for years, wrote the judge, acknowledging that the COVID-19 pandemic dealt it a blow it has yet to recover from. 

Raymond Chabot inc. says it will favour a buyer in the movie theatre industry.

Investors wishing to make an offer have until Feb. 21 to express their interest.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Cassandra Yanez-Leyton is a journalist for CBC News based in Montreal. You can email her story ideas at [email protected].