Film Exhibition This is the process of showing a film to an audience, mainly referring to a cinema environment, but with the advent of new digital projection equipment and DVD players, screenings in schools, colleges, art centres and outdoor venues are future possibilities.
The Role of the Exhibitor Film bookings After viewing the film from the distributors for release, the exhibitor/film booker will discuss the release pattern and the financial deal to rent a film from the UK distributor. This is based on projected ticket sales for a film, that is, box-office returns. The cinema programming is scheduled by a film booker. Some cinema chains, multiplexes and multi-screen cinemas operate from a central point or a Head Office with a booking department. The smaller cinemas have an in-house film booker responsible for programming specific films or film seasons. The film booker working for each cinema chain is the person responsible for the films which play in each cinema. The brief for a film booker is to find films which will attract an audience for their cinema and reap a good financial return from the box office. The exhibitor pays the rental fee back to the distributor which is determined by the price of a cinema ticket within the cinema. It is up to the exhibitor to work hand in glove with the distributor in marketing the film to the widest possible audience. Most mainstream films are booked from three to six months in advance, and some major US blockbusters can be booked up to a year in advance of their UK release date. By July most film bookers will have scheduled the slate of films to be released at Christmas.
The cinema building
The exhibitor will have posters and advertisements as well as the date and times of the screenings of current and future films outside their cinema for the interest of the general public. This is an attempt to draw the attention of the public to their cinema. A passer-by who may not have the opportunity to read a newspaper or check the internet will perhaps be encouraged by this publicity to go and see one of the films. The foyer is the first area in the cinema that the audience experiences. Distributors vie for space in the foyer to display posters, standees and other film publicity material and merchandising. It is the cinema manager's job to make sure that the publicity is current and relevant to films showing at their cinema. The exhibitor/cinema is the 'shop front' where the film industry 'sells' films to the audience. The foyers are committed to publicising the films with posters, standees and concession promotions which all advertise the film. Once you are seated in the auditorium, before the main feature, 'teaser' trailers and trailers are shown advertising films that are soon to be released all aimed at attracting a future audience.
Local Marketing The exhibitor's role is important in promoting a film at a local level. The distributor and exhibitor work together to maximise the audience for a film. The cinema manager draws up a marketing plan which includes press advertising, local promotions and competitions. Conversely, cinema managers receive marketing information which keeps them abreast of the distributor's efforts to promote a film. This document tells the cinema managers what is happening and ensures that a film is, at any one time, efficiently promoted at a local level by that cinema manager. The cinema manager can be promoting a lot of films, films currently showing and those still due for release. This could easily come to ten or more in one week.
Why popcorn is important for the film industry‌ Money taken at the box office alone is not enough to give the exhibitor/cinema a profit after paying the rental fee, especially if the film is a failure. The popcorn, icecream, sweets and hotdogs you can buy at the cinema are known as concessions. The concession stands in both multiplexes and independent cinemas provide an additional source of income to the exhibitor. Local press The most common form of marketing that the exhibitor will undertake is to buy space in local newspapers to advertise the films they are screening. This space can be in free newspapers and trade papers or ones which are paid for. These advertisements will often appear on the day of the films' changeover which is usually a Friday, as many chains do between 30-60% of their business during the weekend period. Research shows that advertisements in local newspapers are one of the key ways in which people find out about films screening at their local cinema though since 1997 this has been overturned by the increasing availability of access to the internet. Promotions and competitions These are part of the overall marketing plan the exhibitor has drawn up for the distributor to maximise awareness of the film. They can take the form of competitions in local newspapers or in the cinema foyer e.g. 'spot the difference' games, quizzes on stars, with give-away cinema tickets, or merchandise from the distributors as prizes. This also ensures editorial coverage of the film in the local press: it is a good two-way relationship – the film is covered and the newspaper has something which is entertaining to fill its pages. Trailers The trailer often plays in the cinema around six weeks before the release of a film and continues to play until the film opens in the cinema. The trailer aims to raise audience awareness of a film by fixing the film title in their minds. It gives an overall impression of the film to its potential audience making sure that the audience is aware of the stars – particularly where their names will help to sell the film. A trailer should create the desire to see the film when it eventually opens.
Audience - Who goes to see films? In this country the majority of the cinema-going public are aged between 16 and 23 years old. Statistics show that they are the group which have the time and money to go to the cinema. It is this age group therefore that need to be targeted by filmmakers, distributors and exhibitors to encourage them in, and then back to, the cinema. However, the location of new multiplex cinemas has also led to the development of a more family-centered audience – who are attracted to the nearby shopping or leisure facilities as well as to the cinema itself. Baz Luhrmann's 1997 film William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet was a massive blockbuster hit, but did not have a huge publicity campaign. The film did not receive any Oscars and the reviews in the US and the UK were lukewarm. The exhibitors say that it is one of those very rare films which continue to run because the same people return to see it again and again and it is by word of mouth that they return. It will be one of the most enduring and profitable hits of 1997 with the core audience seemingly being under thirty, whilst the older cinema going public think that it is ‘the best Shakespearean film ever made.’ As the cinema's image has changed and become more up-market with high-grossing films, the price of cinema seats has reflected this change and risen dramatically. It can cost £16 or £17 to see a film in central London and yet cinema audiences continue to rise. Can you think of any reasons why this is so? If the reasons are not purely economic, then the image of cinema going must surely play a part. The multiplex complexes are popular despite often involving a good deal of travelling beyond local public transport. We must now consider whether the cinema-goer is as interested in the facilities surrounding the cinema in which the film is seen as in the actual film on the screen. A good, well publicised film will still draw large audiences, but faced with a poor cinema showing a good film, and a stylish cinema showing a selection of average films, the general public may well opt for the more pleasant up-market surroundings.
Background to the Cinema Exhibition in the UK Since 1995, the number of cinema screens in the UK and the number of admissions have both increased by more than 60%. Screens: 1995 Screens: 2001 Screens 2007
2,005 - Admissions/per Screen: 108.0m/53,865 3,258 - Admissions/per Screen: 176.0m/54,020 3596 - ?
Most of the screens in the UK are owned by one of the major cinema chains. Vue, UCI, Odeon or UGC.
Independent cinemas accounted for only 938 screens (29% of the total number) in 2002, a decrease of 7.5% since 1997. The cinema sector is still in some turmoil at present with two major chains having been sold recently (Warner Village Cinemas was bought by Vue cinemas in 2003) and up to three others available for sale. (May 13, 2003) Vue International Cinemas, the developer and operator of state-of-theart-cinemas, today announced its acquisition of the Warner Village Cinema chain in the UK. The purchase of 36 Warner Village sites nationwide boosts its number of multiplex cinemas from 6 to 42 overall with a total of 384 UK screens
The advent of digital cinema may change this landscape somewhat, but no-one is yet making the necessary investment in digital projection equipment and distribution systems. The UK Film Council are supporting independent cinemas' acquisition of digital technology. The world's first digital cinema network will be established in the UK over the next 18 months. The UK Film Council has awarded a contract worth ÂŁ11.5m to Arts Alliance Digital Cinema (AADC), who will set up the network of up to 250 screens. AADC will oversee the selection of cinemas across the UK which will use the digital equipment. High definition projectors and computer servers will be installed to show mainly British and specialist films. Most cinemas currently have mechanical projectors but the new network will see up to 250 screens in up to 150 cinemas fitted with digital projectors capable of displaying high definition images. The new network will double the world's total of digital screens. Cinemas will be given the film on a portable hard drive and they will then copy the content to a computer server. (BBC News Feb 2005)
Distributor and Exhibitor Relationships The distributor and exhibitor share the risk of marketing films. Generally, the distributor bears more of the risk if a film performs badly, but they normally also gain more from the upside if a film does well. The distributor will make more money from a film doing well in a single cinema than if the revenues are split between a number of sites. They will, therefore, try to restrict the number of prints available to maximise their income from each site. How Exhibitor/Distributor Deals Work…briefly! There are three different types of deal that an exhibitor might enter into with a distributor: i) The House Nut - The House Nut is a figure calculated to represent the costs of running the cinema. In a house nut deal, the rental paid to the distributor will be either 25% of the gross Box Office or 90% of the Box Office minus the house nut (what it cost to run the cinema) – whichever is greater. This is the deal structure generally favoured by the majors. ii) Scale - Under this arrangement, the amount payable to the distributor rises according to the amount that Box Office exceeds a pre-set break figure, which is often capped at 50%. Exhibitors will often offer guaranteed minimum payments and the parties may agree special terms to cover overages if the film performs particularly well. This structure is often used by independent distributors. iii) Percentage - Finally, the parties might agree a straight percentage split of the Box Office. This type of deal is becoming increasingly common in the UK, being used for expected blockbusters. Cinema Revenues – How do exhibitors make money? Ticket sales are only one aspect of a cinema's revenues. In 2001, ticket sales contributed about 66% of total revenues, with concessions income and pre-film advertising accounting for around 16% each. On average, cinemas generate £1 of concessions income and £1 of advertising revenue for every person who buys a ticket. These figures are averaged across the multiplex chains and independent cinemas - in practice, the multiplexes tend to make more from sales of popcorn and drinks than the independents - between them, the top three chains sell some 16 million buckets of popcorn a year. Over the past twenty years cinema going in the UK has experienced something of a renaissance. Attendances have increased from just fifty million a year to nearly one hundred and eighty million. Experts are divided about the reasons why this should have happened. Is it that there are better quality films around that people want to see? Is it that there are now more comfortable cinemas for people to visit? Up until the mid 1980's cinemas in many countries, particularly the UK, Italy and Germany had received very little in the way of investment and because of this many cinemas deteriorated. Whereas once a trip to the cinema meant a visit to somewhere that was more comfortable than home, the state of British cinemas in the early 1980's meant that people were visiting run down, uncomfortable places.
In the 1970's large, single screen cinemas had been cheaply converted into three or four screen cinemas. This would often mean that the audience in one screen could hear what was happening in the film on the screen next door. This detracted from the enjoyment of the film and consequently caused a drop in audience attendance at the cinema. With audience attendance levels declining box-office takings waned. The Hollywood distributors found themselves particularly affected by this. As a result of this decline, the major US studios realised that they would have to revitalise and invest in the European exhibition industry (it’s worth 60% of the overall international market) if their own production industry was to survive. Exhibitors also begun to realise that as well as selling films to audiences, they also have to sell their own cinemas as the best place to go and see these films. It was the major American studios, such as Universal, Warner Bros. and Paramount who were the main investors in the development of multiplexes around the world. Through detailed research they came to the conclusion that many countries did not have enough screens to cater for the audience that they were trying to develop. In the mid 1980's they also realised that the state of many cinemas in countries such as the UK was so bad that people would not want to visit them. Thus, through the building of multiplexes, companies hoped to encourage many more cinema goers into their cinemas and stimulate interest and excitement.
Types of Cinema in the UK In the UK, there are three main types of cinema exhibition environments:
1. Multiplex A North American concept, the first UK cinema opening in Milton Keynes in 1985 owned by the American MultiCinema Corporation (AMC). There are now a number of chains such as UGC, UCI, Warner Village and MGM. Most Odeon cinemas outside London also now have multiplex sites, although some are still 4-5 screen high street sites. Most are multi-national corporations with many, many tentacles of ownership: 1. Warner Village Cinemas are now Vue, a company owned by SBC Cinemas, owned by a group of US financial and legal firms; 2. UCI is owned by Universal and Paramount Pictures; 3. Odeon is now co-owned by German Bank WestLB, The Entertainment Group and an individual called Robert Tchenguiz (who he is I'm not exactly sure); 4. UGC is owned by UGC France who also have a distribution arm.
The multiplex cinema is a new building situated on the edge of a large conurbation or city and houses between eight to fifteen screens. The US distributors determined that cinemas should be located close to large shopping centres, restaurants and other leisure pursuits (bowling, ice-skating rinks etc.) to attract as wide a potential audience as possible. Easy access and parking for cars, an opportunity to combine a cinema visit with a shopping spree and a meal out has changed the concept of cinema going and seems to have been fundamental to the success of the multiplex. It has turned cinema going, literally, into a 'family centred' activity. The number of screens can range from 12-15, and in some cases up to 25, such as Star City in Birmingham. However, this `megaplex', which boasted shops, restaurants, a tattoo bar and screens that were to be dedicated to art house and Bollywood fare, has proved to be problematic. While there is a greater representation of Asian cinema than usual for a multiplex, reflecting the local demographic, the commitment to art house cinema appears to have fallen victim to the Hollywood juggernaught. Multiplexes claim to offer a wide range of choice, but in reality, across the country they will all play the same 8-10 core titles. Summary of UK cinema admissions and the number of screens in operation 1985-2002
1985 1990 1992 1994 1996 1997 2002 (forecast)
Admissions (million) (1) 72 97 103 124 124 140 185
Total Number of screens (2) 1,251 1,685 1,845 1,969 2,250 2,356 3,150
Number of Multiplex Screens (3) 10 393 564 683 900 1,103 1,900
Each screen of the multiplex has a different seating capacity so that the exhibitors can cater for very popular mainstream films with a large audience attendance alongside lesser known art house or specialist films with a limited audience. These multiplexes have allowed a range of films to be shown, usually with different start times, and allowed customer choice to be central to the visit to a multiplex. Sophisticated sound and image technology has been installed into these multiplex cinemas which offers the audience a more exciting experience. Q. Although audience choice was a central part of the success of the multiplex what actually have multiplexes allowed exhibitors to do? Slightly different to the large, out-of-town multiplex - the multi-screen cinema is an upgrade of the old 1970s ‘flea-pits’.
Not only were these old cinemas renovated, but the old large single auditorium cinemas with an audience capacity of fifteen hundred people, were divided into three to eight screen cinemas. These became known as multi-screen cinemas. The multiscreen cinemas echoed the multiplex notion of offering a choice of films in a modern, comfortable environment. However, they attracted a different type of audience from the multiplex due to their city centre location. Very few can offer the large car parking facilities of the multiplex but most are easily accessible by public transport and are convenient for those working or shopping in the city centre. 2. The Subsidised Sector A number of venues across the country, both full time and part time, are revenue funded by grant in aid from various sources. Each venue and organisation has to hit certain criteria before funding is given (business plans, strategies for education, marketing and artistic programming, financial forecasts, etc. are required). The venues may also get funding from local authorities, the National Lottery, sponsorship, Europe and also, of course, from the box office. Their programmers endeavour to put on the widest range of cinema possible, combining film screenings with a range of special events such as regional filmmaking forums, director/actor workshops, digital video work and mixed media events. Some venues instigate their own festivals and touring programmes.
3. Commercial Art House A number of commercial cinemas across the country now mix art house and multiplex programming, the most successful being the City Screen chain. City Screen run the Curzon Soho Cinema in London and also a number of sites across the country in towns such as York, Stratford Upon Avon, Cambridge and Brighton where there is no other art house provision. Technical facilities are usually excellent, and most sites have a bar and restaurant. As with multiplexes, the financing of the City Screen circuit is complicated, based in London and New York.
And the future... At the moment, both distribution and exhibition sectors are going though a time of massive change. The Government set up the UK Film Council in 2000 to create a 'sustainable UK film industry' and there has been many changes in the funding system with various lottery schemes, new Regional Screen agencies being created and the development of regional Arts. More positively, as discussed earlier the UKFCs Specialised Prints and Advertising Fund gave £1 million in 2003 to selected distributors who wanted to create more prints and more marketing for selected nonmainstream, specialised films, which in turn will hopefully increase audience access. Titles including the Oscar nominated New Zealand drama Whale Rider and the German comedy Goodbye Lenin! That both reached wider audiences in more cinemas and garnering respectable box office figures as a result.
Conclusion There are many forces that come together to shape the pattern of what ends up on UK screens. Some of these arise from the practices of film distribution as a complex monopoly that holds the balance of power over exhibitors whilst also marginalizing independent distributors. At the same time, intense competition between cinemas means that most multiplexes prioritize the same titles, whilst ignoring others. Whereas this has been found to maximize admissions, the policy has also had the detrimental effect to cinemas of raising their film hire costs. For film viewers, the most notable effect of these economic pressures has been the failure of the escalating number of cinema screens to significantly expand their viewing choices. The UK Film Council has sought to breach the barriers faced by exhibitors and distributors who wish to make available a wider range of quality filmmaking. In 2002 it acquired a £17 million budget to promote niche product in the UK. Part of this was made available to distributors for the marketing of specialized films. Enhancing awareness of alternatives to the mainstream helps to increase its attractiveness to cinemas and the public alike. The bulk of the budget has been allocated to cinemas themselves, in order to create a ‘virtual circuit’ of digital art house screens in both multiplexes and small independent sites around the country. In May 2005, the Film Council named the 209 sites that would benefit from the installation of 238 digital screens, which would be devoted to ‘more specialised (i.e. non-Hollywood), classic, and foreign language movies. This process is currently well underway and is due for completion in 2006. The adoption of digital projection reduces the cost to distributors of striking and shipping film prints. This makes viable the provision of specialized product to a larger number of cinemas. This will be a boon to the art houses that already rely on such films but who often find it difficult to obtain them on or close to the release date when public awareness and demand is generally at its highest. At the same time, the obligation of participating multiplexes to play specialized product will increase its geographical provision outside the metropolitan areas in which most existing art houses are located.
Publicly funded government intervention, administered by the UK Film Council may indeed prove to be the only way of sustaining the availability of niche product to audiences across the UK. There is great optimism that the emergence of highspecification digital projection will make a tangible difference in the near future. In the meantime, though, the dominance of film exhibition by multiplex chains shows every sign of engendering an increasingly homogenized experience of cinema going for most audiences. 1. Exhibitors are the route to customers. All film makers think carefully about how their production decisions affect the exhibition sector. 2. Exhibitors are increasingly involved in promoting independent films locally where personal appearances by cast and crew can generate good press. 3. The exhibition sector in the UK has grown rapidly but now is a period of some consolidation. The advent of digital technology is raising some interesting issues for the relationships between producer, director and exhibitor. 4. The last three years has seen a power shift within the industry leading as more major distributors buy up cinema chains - this has led to a cut in the remaining independent exhibitors' margins and creates a possible threat to their future survival.