Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Why the smallest cinemas matter

I spent the past weekend attending the annual get together of Våra Gårdar, whose 70-odd cinemas account for just one per cent of Sweden's box office and is run by the temperance movement, in Leksand, Dalarna. Was a mad, desperate or starved of sights of the Swedish countryside to be attending an event like this. None of the above.

At the moment the battle is on for how to finance the digitisation of the largest cinema chains in Europe. An old friend joked about how in the next few months the eager European third
party integrators will step off a plan from LAX, waving the VPF (virtual print fee) document above their head and proclaiming 'Digital Cinema in our time!' But the trick is not how to make a deal with the Hollywood studios but how to make a deal on the local level, most importantly of all, one that takes account of all cinemas, large and small.

I joked a while back about the need to launch a 'No Cinema Left Behind' plan for digital, which has been taken up in the US when J. Wayne Anderson was elected MD of the Cinema Buying Group, L.L.C. (CBG). But so far that has not been headed. Sadly there does not seem any concerted effort to do this, either at a national or pan-European level. Instead we still get the occasional misguided call for 'European' digital cinema standards (whatever those are).

The truth is that those that best understand how to save the small cinemas are the people who run the small cinemas themselves. It was these people that I had the privilege to meet, talk to and get to know in Leksand, which also happens to have one of the most beautiful cinemas in the whole country (sorry, no picture). Despite the town just having 5,000 citizens, gets first run films such as Spider-Man 3 and Pirates 3. The team from Fox Sweden were even there to hand out donuts from the Simpsons Movie mobile. And as further recognition of the big-small importance of the event, also attending was Sweden's Minister of Culture, the head of Swedish Television, and the new head of the audience department for the Swedish Film Institute. I won't go into detail about everything that was said, including an off-the-record lunch with the Minister, but I think Sweden has the ability to tackle this issue head on. The answer is not just to try to throw money at the problem.

As a bonus on the trip I also got to visit the only Scandinavian cinema museum, located two hours outside the capital Stockholm but well worth the trip. Have a look for yourself at Biografmuseet, even if it is in Swedish and fall in love with the very idea of cinemas and realise why it is worth saving in the digital age.

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