Regal Cinemas14 Screens, 1100 Seats
This business has not yet been claimed by the owner or a representative.
121 Tuckahoe Road, Sewell, NJ 08080, USA
Regal bought United Artists in 2002 and stripped the UA branding from nearly every former property. This one kept it. Regal UA Washington Township sits at 121 Tuckahoe Road in Sewell, roughly 20 minutes southeast of Philadelphia. The 14-screen multiplex opened on December 23, 1994. Two different parent companies have run it over three decades. The name on the marquee never changed.
Most 14-screen multiplexes built from the mid-1990s onward have stadium seating.
This one doesn’t. The auditoriums at Regal UA Washington Township are flat-floor. That was standard for a 1994 opening, and became the exception within a decade.
The cinema opened on December 23, 1994, days before Christmas. United Artists Theatre Circuit built it. The UA branding stayed on the signage even after Regal Entertainment Group absorbed the UA circuit in 2002. That held through the 2015 recliner retrofit.
It holds now.
The layout is a single large central lobby with auditoriums arranged around it. Theatres spider out from the middle. Everyone passes through the same concession area before splitting off.
The fourteen auditoriums range widely in size. Theatre 4 seats 185, and Theatre 11 holds 181. The smallest room has 46 seats. Most fall somewhere between 68 and 107.
Regal runs it today as part of the national chain’s Unlimited subscription programme and Crown Club loyalty system. First-run Hollywood output, nothing more specialized.
Digital projection throughout.
No IMAX. No Dolby Cinema. No ScreenX or any of the premium formats that Regal has rolled out at its larger properties.
RealD 3D is available in select auditoriums. Most screenings are standard 2D. Showtimes list format alongside each film.
Fourteen screens in total. Theatre 4 is the largest at 185 seats. Theatre 11 follows at 181. Theatre 9 is the smallest at 46. That range matters if a release is likely to draw crowds.
A sold-out 185-seat house sounds different than a sold-out 46-seat one.
Flat-floor setup. Row choice matters more here than at a stadium venue.
Not stadium seating.
Flat-floor auditoriums, the way multiplexes were built before the mid-1990s stadium wave.
Regal retrofitted the house with King Size recliners in 2015. The rollout covered several South Jersey and Pennsylvania cinemas, including Moorestown Stadium 12 and Oxford Valley Stadium 14. The recliners are power-operated and go nearly flat.
Seating totals 1,100 across fourteen screens. Fewer than 80 per auditorium on average. The largest two hold 185 and 181 seats. Several small rooms seat under 50.
Reserved seating is standard now. You pick your row when you buy the ticket.
That matters for a flat-floor layout.
Sightlines genuinely vary row to row.
$6 Tuesdays used to be the draw at Regal locations nationwide.
The programme shifted to Crown Club members only. That changed how locals plan their week.
Beyond that, programming is standard first-run Hollywood. New releases hit every Friday. Thursday-night previews run for bigger titles. Weekends stack with morning and matinee slots, and the last show typically starts around 9:00 or 9:30.
Regal Unlimited subscribers book the same showtimes at no per-ticket cost.
The cinema has hosted Japanese anime theatrical releases, including Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba. Those tend to hold in the schedule longer than typical limited releases.
No art-house or repertory programming here on a regular basis.
The nearest venue for that kind of thing is in Philadelphia.
Matinee pricing runs roughly $8 to $10 at most showtimes. Evenings push $14 or higher, depending on the film. 3D adds a surcharge.
Senior and child fares are lower.
Tickets sell through Fandango or the Regal app.
Mobile tickets scan at the door. Print tickets still work if you want them.
Regal Crown Club membership is free. Points convert to concessions and ticket discounts.
Box office on-site opens before the first show. For current pricing, call 844-462-7342.
Popcorn in three sizes.
Refills on the largest tub if you’re a Regal Crown Club member. That’s been the standard chain-wide for years.
No alcohol here. No dine-in service either. This is a classic concession stand, not a dine-in cinema.
Coca-Cola Freestyle machines offer the usual flavour combinations.
ICEE frozen drinks are available. The hot-food case runs to pretzel bites and hot dogs.
The single central concession area serves all fourteen screens. Queues build fast before the 7:00 PM wave of showtimes.
Call ahead if you use a mobility device and need a specific showtime.
The wheelchair spaces in each auditorium are fixed to specific rows. Getting the placement right matters more here than at a stadium cinema.
Closed captioning devices are available at guest services. Assisted listening devices also. Audio description tracks run on many first-run releases.
The flat-floor layout avoids the climb required by stadium seating.
The main entrance is ground-level.
For specific accessibility questions, call 844-462-7342 before booking.
121 Tuckahoe Road in Sewell, New Jersey.
That’s Route 555, a county road that runs 1.1 miles from its terminus at Route 42 east into Monroe Township.
Route 42 is the Black Horse Pike. It’s a four-lane divided highway that connects to the Atlantic City Expressway less than two miles from the cinema.
Philadelphia is 20 minutes north via Route 42 and the Walt Whitman Bridge. Atlantic City runs about 45 minutes east on the Expressway.
Free surface parking surrounds the property. The lot is shared with retail neighbours in the same plaza.
NJ Transit bus route 463 runs through Washington Township with stops within a mile. The 400-series buses to Philadelphia board at nearby park-and-rides.
Washington Township has about 49,378 residents. That makes it the largest municipality in Gloucester County.
Median household income sits around $114,000, well above the New Jersey state average.
Most of the township is postwar suburban development.
It was largely farmland until the 1960s. CNN and Money put it on their Best Places to Live list in 2008 at number 58.
The immediate area around the cinema runs retail and restaurants. Washington Township Plaza and Hurffville Crossings both sit within a short drive. Chain eateries line the stretch of Tuckahoe Road leading to the venue.
Jefferson Health’s Washington Township hospital is about three miles south. Rowan College of South Jersey’s Sewell campus is within a similar distance.
Sewell itself is a geographic puzzle. The ZIP code 08080 covers parts of both Washington Township and Mantua Township. The cinema’s mailing address says Sewell. Its physical location is inside Washington Township.
Most visitors probably never notice the distinction. The theatre has been here long enough to serve three generations of local moviegoers.