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VIP viewing: cinemas bet on luxury bars and beds to usher in a new film era

2 days ago
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From champagne coolers to front row VIP beds, cinema owners are investing heavily in premium experiences as the industry gets its box office mojo back,As the third instalment in James Cameron’s blockbuster Avatar series pulls in the Christmas holiday crowds, the UK box office is expected to surpass £1bn in 2025 for the first time since before the global Covid pandemic,Amid financially testing times – with the pace of a hoped-for box office recovery derailed by the Hollywood actors’ and writers’ strikes – cinema owners have focused on reinventing the movie-going experience to win back film fans,“We are rolling out 200 of our Ultra Lux seats, which have a built-in champagne or wine cooler, each day across Europe,” says Tim Richards, chief executive and founder of the Vue cinema chain,“Our ‘worst’ seat in the house is a leather recliner, and it is amazingly comfortable.

We have been investing very heavily and to use an airline analogy, our new cinemas are business and first class – and that’s it – but at prices for everyone.”Its rival Odeon first launched its premium offering, under the Luxe brand, in 2017 and it now has 38 venues which the company says have become the “defining standard” for customers across its entire estate.Odeon has moved to super-charge its premium strategy with the introduction of Luxe Suite Pods, which it describes as a “private cocoon” with luxury seats that is proving a hit for date night and with families.It is also introducing VIP Beds, now in nine locations, which promise to “transform the front row into the best seat in the house”.“This is next level,” says Suzie Welch, managing director for UK & Ireland at Odeon.

“Over the last 18 months we have been looking at what we want to do next with Luxe, what we think our guests want next from their cinema experience.Innovations like the Luxe Suites and VIP Beds are about creating a different experience; families love them and they are great for an evening experience, like a date night.The focus is on how we can give people choice and experiences for all occasions.”The cost of seating in cinemas varies widely depending on factors including the time and day of the week, the type of film, sound and picture technology, and the location.Vue’s Ultra Lux recliner seats range from £10 to about £26.

Odeon’s range of Luxe seating runs from £7.50 to £35 for a VIP bed for three, and £28 for a Luxe Pod for two.The path to premium has been pioneered by Everyman, founded in 2000, where viewers can lounge on sofas and have food and beverages ordered to their seats.Its model is proving to be a runaway success post-pandemic, with Everyman’s latest results showing a 46% year-on-year increase in sign-ups to its membership programme in the first half, and revenues growing by a fifth.The chain has also seen admission numbers rise, despite an increase in ticket prices, with movie-goers spending more on food and drink.

“Everyman have led the way on premium for more than 20 years – comfy seats, food – other chains are catching on to that,” says Andrew Renton, director of research at Cavendish.“Smaller cinemas, a cosier feel and higher spend.”But the move to premium by mass-market chains – which include operators such as Vue introducing next-generation laser projectors to rival the experience offered by Imax – coincides with a significant shift in cinema-going habits.Cinema attendance has been well down since the pandemic, from 176m annual UK admissions in 2019 to 126m in 2024, as many film fans fell out of love with the big screen.While the push to premium may make film-going a more attractive prospect, cinema audiences are not expected to bounce back to pre-pandemic levels, even if the number of film releases return to pre-2020 levels.

The cost of living crisis has meant household bills have soared, making cash-strapped consumers much more selective about what they spend their extra income on.“It is probably the case that movie fans will continue to go less than they did,” says Renton.“However, they are willing to spend more on the occasion, as we have seen in other sectors, such as big ticket gigs like Coldplay and Oasis.”The cinema industry is also continuing to come to grips with the small screen revolution, prompted by the rise of Netflix, with consumers now awash with choice when it comes to in-home entertainment.Netflix’s co-founder, Reed Hastings, once succinctly summed up the intense battle for attention in the digital age when he said the company considered almost every activity to be a rival – half-joking that sleep was its biggest competitor.

Cinema companies are also trying to offer more than the traditional experience as they face extra competition from the rise of the experiential economy.The £98bn market for immersive experiences is booming, from The Greatest Showman-inspired Come Alive, the long-established Abba Voyage, and Crystal Maze, to more recent pop-ups linked to Minecraft, Jurassic World and Squid Game.“It comes down to what is the purpose of cinema becoming, because it is not just about the old model where it was about going to see a film as soon as it is released,” says Renton.“Now it is much more about experiential leisure.They realise that to continue to capture that going-out experience they have to make a bigger difference.

They are doing that through premiumisation.”While there have been flashes of pre-pandemic levels of commercial success, including most recently the Wicked films, the industry still lacks the blockbusters to realise its ambitions for a premium-led-experience recovery.Vue’s CEO, Richards, acknowledges that “2025 is still a period where we have seen 20% fewer movies released compared to the average of the three-year pre-pandemic period of 2017, 2018 and 2019”.However, he points to the increasing commitment to the big screen shown by the Silicon Valley giants as evidence of a healthy future.Apple’s release of F1, Brad Pitt’s highest-grossing film, has given the iPhone maker confidence in its big-screen strategy.

And after Amazon’s $8.5bn acquisition of MGM – the Hollywood studio behind the James Bond and Rocky franchises, as well as an extensive library ranging from Gone with the Wind to The Hobbit – the studio is scaling up and matching the output of traditional film studios with plans for 10 big releases in 2026 and a further 16 in 2027.“It takes 18- to 24 months-plus for a major production to go from being green lit to the big screen,” says Richards.“We are just really now starting to see the Hollywood machine rev up and get going again.”For now, the cinema industry is looking at a promising year ahead.

Big releases include Super Mario, more editions of Spider-Man, Avengers, Dune and Moana, a fifth Toy Story release and a third in the Jumanji franchise.The insights company Omdia estimates that the volume of releases of films of all budgets in the UK next year will hit 850, the most since 2019.“In totality, next year and in 2027 we will see the same number of releases, or an even greater number, than before the pandemic,” says Richards.“When the history books are written, this is the end of the post-pandemic period and new era of film.”
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‘Undermines free speech’: Labour MP hits back at US government over visa ban on UK campaigners

A senior Labour MP has accused the Trump administration of undermining free speech after Marco Rubio, the US secretary of state, announced sanctions against two British anti-disinformation campaigners.Chi Onwurah, the chair of parliament’s technology select committee, criticised the US government hours after it announced “visa-related” sanctions against five Europeans, including Imran Ahmed and Clare Melford.Ahmed leads the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), while Melford is chief executive of the Global Disinformation Index (GDI), both of which have clashed directly with Elon Musk, the owner of X and a former adviser to the US president.Onwurah said on Wednesday: “Banning people because you disagree with what they say undermines the free speech the administration claims to seek.“We desperately need a wide ranging debate on whether and how social media should be regulated in the interests of the people

3 days ago
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Visa ban for European critics of online harm is first shot in US free speech war

For Maga politicians, European tech regulation hits hard in two areas: at the economic interests of Silicon Valley and at their view of free speech.The action against five Europeans who are taking on harmful content and the platforms that host it has had an inevitable feel to it, given the increasingly vociferous reactions to the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA) and the UK’s Online Safety Act (OSA). Both pieces of legislation require social media firms to protect users or face the threat of sizeable fines. Indeed, Elon Musk’s X has been fined €120m (£105m) this month for breaching the DSA.These acts are prime examples of what US Republicans see as an anti-free speech culture on the other side of the Atlantic

3 days ago
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European leaders condemn US visa bans as row over ‘censorship’ escalates

European leaders including Emmanuel Macron have accused Washington of “coercion and intimidation”, after the US imposed a visa ban on five prominent European figures who have been at heart of the campaign to introduce laws regulating American tech companies.The visa bans were imposed on Tuesday on Thierry Breton, the former EU commissioner and one of the architects of the bloc’s Digital Services Act (DSA), and four anti-disinformation campaigners, including two in Germany and two in the UK.The other individuals targeted were Imran Ahmed, the British chief executive of the US-based Center for Countering Digital Hate; Anna-Lena von Hodenberg and Josephine Ballon of the German non-profit HateAid; and Clare Melford, co-founder of the Global Disinformation Index.Justifying the visa bans, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, wrote on X: “For far too long, ideologues in Europe have led organised efforts to coerce American platforms to punish American viewpoints they oppose. The Trump administration will no longer tolerate these egregious acts of extraterritorial censorship

4 days ago
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‘A gamechanger’: 200,000 UK small businesses sign up to TikTok Shop

It is better known for its viral dances and for making hits out of forgotten songs, but the social media site TikTok is becoming a force to be reckoned with as a shopping platform.Major retailers such as Marks & Spencer, Samsung, QVC, Clarks, and Sainsbury’s are now selling their wares on the site’s e-commerce service, TikTok Shop, alongside more than 200,000 UK small and medium businesses.Launched in Britain in 2021, TikTok Shop recorded its biggest sales day in the UK on Black Friday, with 27 items sold every second. Across the Black Friday and Cyber Monday period, sales were up by 50% on last year.The service works by letting brands sell directly inside TikTok through videos and livestreams with embedded links to items for sale, as well as through a separate shop tab on their profiles

4 days ago
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Former EU commissioner and activists barred from US in attack on European tech regulators

The state department has barred five Europeans from the US, accusing them of leading efforts to pressure tech firms to censor or suppress American viewpoints, in the latest attack on European regulations that target hate speech and misinformation.Secretary of state Marco Rubio said the five people targeted with visa bans – who include former European Commissioner Thierry Breton – have led “organized efforts to coerce American platforms to censor, demonetize, and suppress American viewpoints they oppose.”“These radical activists and weaponized NGOs have advanced censorship crackdowns by foreign states – in each case targeting American speakers and American companies,” Rubio said in an announcement.In recent months, Trump officials have ordered US diplomats to build opposition to the European Union’s landmark Digital Services Act (DSA), which is intended to combat hateful speech, misinformation and disinformation, but which Washington says stifles free speech and imposes costs on US tech companies.Late on Tuesday night, Breton posted on social media: “Is McCarthy’s witch hunt back?”Tuesday’s move is part of a Trump administration campaign against foreign influence over online speech, using immigration law rather than platform regulations or sanctions

4 days ago
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Elon Musk, AI and the antichrist: the biggest tech stories of 2025

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, wishing you a happy and healthy end of the year. I myself have a cold.Today, we are looking back at the biggest stories in tech of 2025 – Elon Musk’s political rise, burst and fall; artificial intelligence’s subsumption of the global economy, all other technology, and even the Earth’s topography; Australia’s remarkable social media ban; the tech industry’s new Trumpian politics; and, as a treat, a glimpse of the apocalypse offered by one of Silicon Valley’s savviest and strangest billionaires.At the close of 2024, I wrote that Elon Musk’s support of Donald Trump had made him the world’s most powerful unelected man

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