Sony Pictures will not be releasing any tentpoles theatrically until the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has been resolved.

"What we won’t do is make the mistake of putting a very, very expensive $200 million movie out in the market unless we’re sure that theaters are open and operating at significant capacity," Sony Pictures Entertainment Chairman Tony Vinciquerra said at Bank of America’s 2020 Media, Communications & Entertainment Conference.

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"You’ll see a lot of strange things happen over the next six months in how films are released, how they’re scheduled, how they’re marketed, but once we get back to normal, we will have learned a lot I think and found ways to do things that are somewhat different and hopefully better," he added.

Vinciquerra's comments come in the wake of Tenet becoming the first tentpole to premiere theatrically since the COVID-19 pandemic began. That Christopher Nolan feature opened to $20.1 million domestically and has secured just over $150 million worldwide.

In the wake of the COVID-19 health crisis, movie theaters across the globe were closed and numerous 2020 tentpoles were delayed. Some, like the Warner Bros.' Wonder Woman 1984 and Marvel Studios' Black Widow, merely opted for later 2020 dates. By contrast, Sony blockbusters Morbius and Ghostbusters: Afterlife were postponed well into 2021.

Upcoming Sony releases include the romantic comedy The Broken Hearts Gallery (Sept. 11), The Last Shift (Sept. 25) and Yellow Rose (Oct. 9).

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(via The Wrap)