The acquisition safeguards critical TMS operations for global exhibitors and reshapes a market previously dominated by two players, opening space for innovation and competition.
When Arts Alliance Media (AAM) entered administration in November 2025, the cinema world lost a silent powerhouse that powers more than 42,000 digital screens. AAM’s flagship theatre management system, Screenwriter, has been the operational backbone for chains such as AMC, Regal and Cineworld. Qube Cinema, an Indian‑origin company known for digital servers, mastering services and the Qube Wire content‑delivery network, stepped in to acquire AAM’s intellectual property, contracts and a small team of specialists. The deal preserves continuity for thousands of exhibitors while giving Qube a ready‑made TMS platform.
The acquisition reshapes the competitive landscape of cinema‑software. Previously, only AAM and Unique X dominated the global TMS market, raising concerns that a Unique X takeover would create a near‑monopoly and stifle pricing and innovation. By absorbing AAM, Qube not only blocks that consolidation but also expands its end‑to‑end stack—from servers and PLF hardware to a fully integrated management suite. Qube’s stated ambition is to transform the traditionally heavyweight TMS rollout into a SaaS‑like experience, promising faster release cycles, browser‑based configuration and on‑demand reporting.
For exhibitors, the immediate benefit is stability: support teams stay in place, contracts are honored and the Screenwriter platform remains operational. The longer‑term test will be whether Qube can deliver the promised workflow acceleration, lighter deployments and richer analytics without sacrificing reliability. Industry observers will watch release velocity, integration flexibility and the transparency of product roadmaps over the next 12 months. If Qube succeeds, it could set a new benchmark for cinema technology, encouraging other vendors to adopt cloud‑first, modular approaches and ultimately improving the bottom line for theatre operators.
London-based Qube Cinema announced the acquisition of Arts Alliance Media (AAM), a global leader in cinema software and services, after AAM entered administration in November 2025. The deal transfers AAM's intellectual property, contracts and staff to Qube, ensuring continuity for its network of over 42,000 digital screens. Financial terms were not disclosed.
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