Sex cinemas london
My local independent cinema has just one wheelchair space, tucked right on the back row. If another wheelchair user has booked ahead, then my movie plans are quickly scuppered. At the larger chain cinema, the wheelchair spaces are extremely close to the screen. When I went to see Wonder Woman , I had to watch with my neck craned awkwardly upwards.


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The One Good Thing About Cinemas Closing
Theatres are closing around the world. Jobs are being culled. No one knows when projectors will be fired up again. Cinema is far from unique in being an industry under threat in the time of Covid



No Time to Die should NOT be streamed, says Bond Girl Valerie Leon
The first of more than cinemas will reopen in England this weekend in a final attempt to cash in on festive moviegoing cheer, but plans by Warner Bros to stream new films including Dune and the next Matrix sequel at the same time as theatre premieres next year threatens to undermine a post-Covid box office revival. Hollywood studios have seized on theatre closures during the pandemic to experiment with digital releases, infuriating theatre owners who rely on the once sacrosanct model of big screen exclusivity for months on end to make their finances work. The company has described the decision as a one-year plan, limited to the US, to maximise profits as the Covid pandemic is expected to cut cinema attendance significantly for the foreseeable future. Nevertheless, other Hollywood studios will almost certainly look to adopt similar plans, which if successful would mark the moment the global streaming phenomenon broke the traditional cinema model. If simultaneous streaming with big screen premieres did become the norm, cinema owners would probably have to look at closing sites in less viable locations and rein in expansion.





Cinemas in England won't be able to reopen until at least May 17 as part of the roadmap to lifting lockdown in the country. Prime Minister Boris Johnson outlined the plans this afternoon February 22 in the House of Commons, and the news will be another huge blow to the cinema industry in England as it rules out a conventional release for some big movies. Step two of the roadmap, which will happen no earlier than April 8, does include drive-in cinemas, so it could well be that some of those movies will be available on the big screen if they aren't delayed.
