‘To truly forget life for a while – a reprieve and a reward’: why Australians love going to the cinema | By Ruari Elkington


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Khak/Shutterstock



Australians have had plenty of time in the last 100 years to work out what they value about cinema-going and why it matters. Head to any cinema and catch the Val Morgan advertising in the pre-show. Take a closer look at the date the company was founded. Not 1984, but 1894. That’s more than 125 years of “Making Messages Memorable” on Australian screens.

We have a deep and abiding love for cinema in this country. Over the last century, the experience of going to the movies has both shifted significantly (we invented Gold Class, you know) and somehow remained resolutely enduring in terms of appeal.



My colleague Tess Van Hemert and I have spent the last two years researching the cultures and practices of cinema-going and how cinema sites shape that experience.

A typical response in our research was:

I love the cinema experience. It’s a bonding experience, if it’s good it’s a emotional and cathartic experience.​



‘A reprieve and a reward’​


Cinemas are a catalyst for social, cultural and economic activity wherever they operate, from single-screen regional sites to major multiplexes in suburban shopping malls. Cinema, our participants said, is the “ideal” way to watch a movie:

I like to sit as close as I can to the screen so that the ‘real’ world is completely blocked out. I am immersed in & in awe of the film only. To truly forget life for a while – a reprieve & a reward.​



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Cinema-goers spoke about the importance of being a quiet part of a community. Jake Hills/Unsplash


Cinemas also mirror communities back to themselves. We may go in alone, as a couple or with family and friends, but in the cinema we form a community. When reflecting on returning to the cinema between COVID lockdowns, one person spoke of seeing American Utopia:

There were only about 10 people in the cinema. We didn’t know each other but we all started spontaneously dancing, first in our seats, and then everyone ran down to the floor in front of the screen to dance together. It was like a mini music festival when live music was banned.​



Despite the cost, despite the hassle, despite the need to leave the couch, Australians turn up time and time again to cinemas. In 2023, the Australian box office generated nearly A$1 billion (although this is down on pre-COVID figures). Fourof the top ten highest grossing films of all time in Australia have been released since the pandemic began. Australian census data tells us cinema-going remains Australia’s most popular cultural activity.

‘Being able to switch off’​


When cinemas face closure – or shut temporarily, as they did during the pandemic – the outpouring of community support can galvanise a community and remind them of all the times and ways in which they valued that access to that experience.



One participant spoke of seeing their first film in the cinema after the pandemic:

It made me appreciate the whole cinema experience more. Getting out and being able to switch off was a welcome change.​



In our research, we observed how cinemas began to articulate their value to community through the pandemic period of forced closures.

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In 2023, the Australian box office generated nearly A$1 billion. Shutterstock


In the large-scale national audience research we conducted in partnership with Palace Cinemas the value audiences derive from cinema-going was as diverse as the programming.



They remembered specific films, such as watching the opening credits of Force Awakens with a crowd of avid fans, or feeling like they were “experiencing summer in Italy” while watching Call Me By Your Name.

They focused on memories of the people they were with, such as feeling “all grown up” while seeing arthouse films with their dad when they were a kid.



‘Float in the memory’​


They spoke about the feelings they had before during and after the screening and the experience overall. One respondent wrote of loving the end of a film:

the quiet few minutes as the credits roll and you float in the memory of the film. This only happens for me when I see it in the cinema.​



Another participant spoke about leaving the cinema and:

doing a walk around the block thinking about the movie, still thinking about the movie driving home.​



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The quiet few minutes as the credits roll. Krists Luhaers/Unsplash


One participant said they love “being able to have respectful (unbothered) alone time publicly”.

Clear in this data is that memorability – and the experience of cinema – is far more nuanced than the simple appeal of watching a big film in a big room on a big screen. Cinemas continue to serve Australian communities in far more complex way than simply movies and popcorn.



Cinema has always battled headwinds. Since radio, cinema has constantly faced in-home entertainment technology that was supposed to knock it over completely – TV, colour TV, cable, satellite, VHS, DVDs and now streaming. Each time, the desire for people to come together in a space and watch something unique in a way they can’t find anywhere else, with a level of engagement they can’t find anywhere else, has prevailed. We all have a kitchen at home, but we still love going out to restaurants.

Disney, Warner Bros and Australia’s own Birch Carrol and Coyle all celebrated 100 years of operation in 2023. To sustain another century, more research is needed to better understand how cinema-going must continue to evolve to meet shifting audience expectations.



This article was first published on The Conversation, and was written by , Ruari Elkington, Senior Lecturer in Creative Industries & Chief Investigator at QUT Digital Media Research Centre (DMRC), Queensland University of Technology

 
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Last time I went to the cinema the seats and floor where filthy, the place smelt musty, and you could see thick dust hanging off the curtains along the walls. Rather watch my own large tv on my own clean furniture.
 
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Once going to the pictures was a special occasion, everyone got dressed up to the nines, you bought your ticket, food, drink. Ushers and usherettes showed you to your seat, if you were late you were shown to your seat by torchlight. If you needed to go out during the movie you were ushered out and back in by torchlight. There was always an intermission part way through the movie when people would go for loo breaks or to buy more food. When the movie ended everyone was ushered back out by the staff. the seats were pretty hard and uncomfortable, the picture theatre was only cooled by fans in summer, and bar heaters around the walls warmed it in winter. There was usually no carpet on the floors, they were polished floorboards. Now there are online ticket sales, minimal staff working in theatres, carpets and plush seats. You just roll up, buy food, drink if you want it, sometimes line up to enter the theatre if it is a popular movie, otherwise just take yourself into the theatre your movie is showing in, as there are usually multiple pictures screening at once, sit wherever you like. If you arrive or need to go out of the theatre during the movie you have to find your own way with just the light from the screen. The theatre in the town I live in closed recently due to low patronage, it took years of campaigning to get a new theatre after the old open air theatre and indoor theatre had closed years before. A lot of smaller towns have suffered the same fate with the theatres closing down.
 
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Its been ages and ages since I have been to the cinema or a decent club show its been very hard with my leg but I am really trying to get back on my feet 😅
 

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