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| The fringe benefits of Britain’s much-loved community cinemas As mainstream movie theatres struggle, independent film clubs and societies are offering cut-price screenings of blockbusters and niche releases in local venues, and they need our support |
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Gwilym Mumford |  |
| | Britain’s first film club was a bit of a rarefied affair. Founded in 1925 at the New Gallery Kinema on Regent Street in central London, The Film Society counted John Maynard Keynes, George Bernard Shaw and HG Wells among its members, as well as British film and TV pioneers like the director Anthony Asquith and Granada founder, Sidney Bernstein. The Film Society’s mission was to screen “really artistic films” from Europe that had either fallen foul of the UK’s stringent 1909 Cinematograph Act, or were just simply considered too noncommercial for mainstream exhibitors. Such lofty ideals were supported by the Guardian, whose film correspondent, ahead of the society’s first screening, argued that it and other societies had a vital role to play “if there is to be any stemming of the flood of dramatic treacle that pours into our picture-houses week by week”. Were that Guardian correspondent around today, they probably wouldn’t be too encouraged on the “dramatic treacle” front (I’d love to hear their thoughts on The Electric State, say), but they may feel more heartened about the state of the UK’s cinema community. The Film Society is long gone – it folded at the advent of the second world war – but in its place has grown an army of community-run cinemas, film clubs and societies across the country, from Penzance in Cornwall to Stromness in Orkney. Next month sees the beginning of an extended celebration of the centenary of these scrappy upstarts. The festivities are being put together by Cinema For All, a charity dedicated to the support and development of community cinemas and film societies in the UK, of which it estimates there are, staggeringly, more than 1,600 (you can find your nearest one on Cinema For All’s map). Some of these societies have just sprung up while others are old and storied – the Edinburgh Film Guild and the Manchester and Salford Film Society, both founded in 1930, are among the oldest in the world (Manchester and Salford’s president, 102-year-old Marjorie Ainsworth, joined in 1939, the year The Wizard of Oz was released!). And while lots of them are based in cities – London alone has a host of them, from Ealing to Wimbledon – there are plenty based in more remote areas that commercial cinemas don’t serve, like a village hall in the Peak District, or the screen set up in a parish hall in Norfolk specifically so locals could see the Stephen Poliakoff film Glorious 39, which had been filmed in the village (that was in 2009, but their projector has kept on whirring ever since). The output is far more varied than you’d find at your nearest multiplex. Some clubs, like Liverpool’s People Versus TV, are committed to showing experimental, surreal or provocative cinema (“It is important to engage with difficult subjects, and therefore feel uncomfortable things – horror, fear, disgust, shame, guilt – because they are an integral part of being human,” reads the enjoyably intense manifesto of Leeds-based Pervert Pictures). Others are focused on revivals of old films, like High Contrast cinema in Wimborne Minster, Dorset, which programmes Hollywood golden age movies with a focus on “the shadowy corners of film noir”. But many are just doing the more prosaic job of giving their communities an affordable chance (Cinema For All says that tickets for its member societies and cinemas average at about £5) to see relatively recent releases on the big screen – Paddington 3, or Wicked, or the latest André Rieu concert film. | | It may be tempting to be a bit sniffy about that last cohort (our 1925 film correspondent probably would have been), but a lot of these community cinemas are stepping in to a gap vacated by the wider industry. The Empire Cinemas chain is no more and Cineworld, facing financial headwinds, is closing some venues – though, encouragingly, UK box office takings this year are up on the equivalent period in 2024 (thank you for your service, Bridget Jones 4). There has been a perceived direction of travel away from big multiplexes, with their high overheads, and to smaller more manageable one-or-two screen cinemas. Film clubs and societies take this ethos and run with it, screening films in village halls (including one on the southernmost tip of Scotland), church halls, or even “zine libraries” and old miners’ institutes (like the Blaenavon Workmen’s Hall – an absolute beaut). Such adaptability is sadly necessary at a time when historic cinemas seem to be permanently at risk from developers. There’s been plenty of attention, quite rightly, on the threats to the Prince Charles cinema in central London, and Birmingham’s Electric – Britain’s oldest cinema until it abruptly shut last year – shows no signs of reopening any time soon. Edinburgh’s Filmhouse, home to the world’s oldest continually running film festival, was in a similar position but thankfully has been saved and is due to reopen later this year – though the team behind it are still looking for donations to help get the doors open. And they’re not the only ones: the Forum cinema, in Hexham, Northumberland, is looking to restore its art deco fittings and magnificent gold curtains; the Rusthall community cinema near Tunbridge Wells needs a new projector; and the Thamesmead travelling cinema is looking for support to keep its 25-seater mobile miniplex rolling. There are probably hundreds of others that I have missed: definitely try to help them if you can – through donations or just by buying a ticket to see a film – and help keep Britain’s extraordinary community cinema tradition alive. |
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| Take Five | Each week we run down the five essential pieces of pop-culture we’re watching, reading and listening to | | 1 | TV – The Residence
One of the more unusual TV trends of the moment is the spate of series that are nominally set in and around the US presidency, but that have zero interest in real-world politics. Is it down to a squeamishness over recent commanders in chief, maybe? Either way, joining the likes of Paradise and Zero Day this week brought another exercise in the genre, albeit with a very fun concept: Orange Is the New Black’s Uzo Aduba (pictured above) plays a keen-eyed detective investigating the death of the White House’s chief usher at a state dinner. All episodes available now on Netflix.
Want more? Sky’s staggeringly violent crime drama Gangs of London is back for a third season of dimly lit dismemberings. All eps are available now on Sky Atlantic and Now. Plus here’s seven more shows to watch this week.
| 2 | PODCAST – Sports Strangest Crimes: Bloodgate
This longish-running BBC Sounds podcast has in previous series covered the rise and fall of cricket financier and financial fraudster Allen Stanford and the kidnapping of the racehorse Shergar. Now, it turns its hand to one of rugby union’s biggest scandals: Bloodgate, where Harlequins winger Tom Williams feigned injury with a blood capsule he bought from a joke shop, in order to make a late substitution during a crucial game. Williams, as well as players and officials who witnessed the incident, recall the controversy in a podcast narrated enthusiastically, if slightly incongruously, by Ross Kemp.
Want more? Shadow Kingdom: God’s Banker investigates the suspicious death of a Vatican money man. And here are five more pods to get in your ears week.
| 3 | ALBUM – Greentea Peng: Tell Dem It’s Sunny
A placement on the BBC’s Sound Of 2021, back when that list was still genuinely interested in finding the next big thing, seemed to herald great things for this neosoul artist from south-east London, as did that year’s promising debut album Man Made. But then again, as she told the Guardian, Greentea Peng has “no interest in being a pop star”, so this follow-up seems to have been created at her own speed. It was clearly worth it: Tell Dem It’s Sunny sees her deepen and darken on the moody trip-hop of tracks like TARDIS (Hardest), without overlooking the soul bit of neosoul on plaintive single One Foot. Out now.
Want more? Distorted New York noise rockers YHWH Nailgun, one of the strangest and most exhilarating bands I’ve seen live in quite some time, try to translate their in-person performances to record with debut album 45 Pounds. And, for the rest of our music reviews, click here.
| 4 | FILM – Flow
Oscar season isn’t quite over in cinemas just yet. Getting a belated UK release is this much-admired Latvian film, which won best animated feature at the Oscars ahead of Inside Out 2 and Wallace & Gromit: Vengeance Most Fowl. It follows the fortunes of a cat who has to survive in a world that has been overwhelmed by flooding, and where humans seem to be absent. As its painterly CGI graphics and lack of dialogue suggests, this is a film quite unlike American animations from Pixar or DreamWorks. In cinemas now.
Want more? Bobby De Niro plays two warring mob bosses in The Alto Knights, also in cinemas today. And here’s seven more films to watch at home this week.
| 5 | BOOK – Theft by Abdulrazak Gurnah
The Zanzibari, Kent-based author Abdulrazak Gurnah won the 2021 Nobel prize in literature. Theft is the first novel he has written since then, and it is “a vital addition to Gurnah’s remarkable body of work” according to Guardian reviewer Yagnishsing Dawoor. Set in Tanzania during its tourism boom in the 1990s, the novel follows three characters as they enter adulthood. “Powerful, affecting and provocative,” Theft is a novel “steeped in heartbreak and loss,” Dawoor wrote, but “ultimately refuses despair”.
Want more? The inaugural Climate fiction prize shortlist was unveiled on Wednesday, featuring five brilliant novels that look at the climate crisis, including The Ministry of Time by Kaliane Bradley and Orbital by Samantha Harvey. |
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| Read On | | It’s been a banner week for “bands the Guide likes” on the Guardian website: an interview with the mighty Tubs (pictured above) about grief, beer and being perpetually skint, and an encounter with John Reis, responsible for Rocket from the Crypt, Hot Snakes, Drive Like Jehu and numerous other very good groups. | Likewise, on the TV desk there were great pieces recalling how Covid turned TV upside down, from socially distanced chatshows to soap scenes filmed on phones, and a piece by Adolescence writer Jack Thorne on why he felt compelled to write a drama about the dangers of “incel” culture. | Using the slightly tenuous peg of Trump declaring Canada the “51st state”, the Hollywood Reporter has run down the 51 best movies made by America’s neighbour to the north. Plenty of great-sounding films I’ve never seen on there! | When Hope of the States reformed last autumn to play their first gigs in two decades, they were short a piano player, so James Ramsden – restaurateur and passable piano player – volunteered his services. For the Fence he tells the story of joining a band for the first time in your 40s. |
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| You be the Guide | Last week we asked for your favourite onscreen dinner parties. Here’s what you served up: “Chandler on Friends in family dinner hell at the Tribbianis, after he fooled around with one of Joey’s many sisters and has to make amends – but he doesn’t know who he fooled around with. One of Matthew Perry’s best comedic performances in the show, desperately floating questions for the sister in question to answer, only for Joey’s overbearing grandmother to keep answering for her.” – Samantha, Poole “The dinner party scene in Texas Chainsaw Massacre – almost but not quite as bad as Christmas dinner with the in-laws!” – John Lincoln “In the Monty Python film The Meaning of Life, the Grim Reaper shows up at a dinner party, his menacing scythe in hand, to claim the lives of several unsuspecting British couples. They argue with the Reaper for a few minutes, arrogantly disbelieving in their fate until he convinces them that they are really dead. When they ask him how they died, the skeleton forefinger of Death points to the dinner table and bellows with great comic timing … ‘the salmon mousse’.” – Lee Jackson “The confrontation between Jodie Comer and Suranne Jones in Doctor Foster, as the elder women exposes her husband’s infidelity in front of his young mistress’s parents is a sublimely tense watch, and a series high point that Mike Bartlett never quite managed to match.” – Trisha, Streatham |
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| Get involved | I want to hear about your favourite cinema, past or present. Whether you live in the UK or farther afield, let us know your memories of your most beloved picture house. I’m a big fan of Newcastle’s Tyneside cinema (founded by Ridley Scott’s great uncle!) and the Prince Charles of course, and I have fond memories of the long-since demolished Monico cinema in Rhiwbina, Cardiff – though it lives on through the Monico Movies community cinema. Get in touch with your favourite by replying to this email or contacting me on [email protected] |
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| | Check out our Guide playlist on Spotify, updated weekly | |
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