Taylor Swift's 'Eras Tour' is coming to theaters

Our songs, our film, united we stand!
By Elizabeth de Luna  on 
Swift in her black and red "Reputation"-era leotard on stage, arms outstretched to either side.
Credit: Ethan Miller/TAS23/Getty Images for TAS Rights Management

Swifties, put on those friendship bracelets and throw on your cowboy boots: a Taylor Swift Eras Tour film will be playing in a city near you beginning Friday, Oct. 13.

In an Instagram post, Swift announced that her record-breaking Eras Tour would be strutting onto the big screen in the U.S. "The Eras Tour has been the most meaningful, electric experience of my life so far and I’m overjoyed to tell you that it’ll be coming to the big screen soon," she wrote. "Eras attire, friendship bracelets, singing and dancing encouraged."

Tickets are on sale now at AMCTheatres.com and Fandango.com for very Swift-like prices: $19.89 for adults and $13.13 for children and seniors.

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AMC is calling the film the "theatrical event of the millennium" and has taken precautions to ensure its site doesn't have a Ticketmaster-level meltdown as Swifties purchase tickets. Servers can "handle traffic at more than five times the current record for the most ever tickets sold in an hour" on the site.

Still, they aren't magicians. "No ticketing system in history seems to have been able to accommodate the soaring demand" for Swift tickets AMC said in a statement, so buyers may still experience long wait times, delays, and outages while purchasing tickets.

Every AMC Theatre location in the U.S. will run at least four showtimes of the film per day on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays. For the first time, AMC will also act as a distributor for the film, so it can play on additional screens in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.

Good luck, Swifties.

Topics Music

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Elizabeth de Luna

Elizabeth is a culture reporter at Mashable covering digital culture, fandom communities, and how the internet makes us feel. Before joining Mashable, she spent six years in tech, doing everything from running a wifi hardware beta program to analyzing YouTube content trends like K-pop, ASMR, gaming, and beauty. You can find more of her work for outlets like The GuardianTeen Vogue, and MTV News right here


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