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Post by crowblack on Aug 24, 2018 16:30:42 GMT
I don't know whether a thread already exists on this, but I was wondering, what sort of prices do you pay locally? A new Cineworld has just opened up the road and I'm really surprised by the seat prices - adults start at £11.20, with another £2.20 plus £1 for glasses for 3D, going up to £14.20 (plus extra for 3D) for something called 'screen x'. Off-peak before 5pm weekdays is £1.50 off. Woo. This is in a low income area on the fringes of a Northern, relatively low income city. In the city centre, where I presume rates are much higher, the arts centre's Picturehouse is £12.20 peak times, with all seats £7.50 on Mondays, previews £8 and good discounts for pensioners, unemployed etc in daytime.
These prices are similar to - and in some cases more than - a good seat for a preview, day seat or studio seat in a theatre in Liverpool or Manchester. I know these are mainly subsidised but it's not as though cinemas employ skilled projectionists these days!
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Post by ellie1981 on Aug 24, 2018 16:43:31 GMT
The Unlimited schemes are well worth it if you want to go more than once a month. I make stupid use of it with at least two or three week. It even works with Meerkat movies so if you book on your Unlimited card and generate a Meerkat code, a friend can go for free.
I also have a work rewards scheme so I can generate codes for Cineworld, Odeon, Vue and Picturehouse for about £6 a ticket, so I use that if going with someone who doesn’t have an Unlimited card.
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Post by jaqs on Aug 24, 2018 16:43:37 GMT
I'm in london so prices are high most places and I have a cineworld pass. In bristol the old odeon in the city centre is nice and cheap (5.75 this evening) compared to the fancypants showcase, £10.50.
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Post by ensembleswings on Aug 24, 2018 16:58:40 GMT
A standard adult ticket is £10.50 at my local Odeon, goes up to £11.50 or £12.50 for certain films though. I recently got myself a limitless card because it works out far cheaper for me, I only need to go twice a month and I will have made my money back as well as saving a bit as well. I don’t live in a city either, in fact that cinema isn’t even in the same town as me, all the neighbouring towns have to travel to that cinema. Always surprises me how busy the place is given the prices and location though
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Post by david on Aug 24, 2018 17:00:26 GMT
I don't know whether a thread already exists on this, but I was wondering, what sort of prices do you pay locally? A new Cineworld has just opened up the road and I'm really surprised by the seat prices - adults start at £11.20, with another £2.20 plus £1 for glasses for 3D, going up to £14.20 (plus extra for 3D) for something called 'screen x'. Off-peak before 5pm weekdays is £1.50 off. Woo. This is in a low income area on the fringes of a Northern, relatively low income city. In the city centre, where I presume rates are much higher, the arts centre's Picturehouse is £12.20 peak times, with all seats £7.50 on Mondays, previews £8 and good discounts for pensioners, unemployed etc in daytime. These prices are similar to - and in some cases more than - a good seat for a preview, day seat or studio seat in a theatre in Liverpool or Manchester. I know these are mainly subsidised but it's not as though cinemas employ skilled projectionists these days! Totally agree with your thoughts here. This is why I only go to the cinema only a few times a year. I mainly go for the Marvel / 007/ Star Trek films with maybe a few others thrown in. Last time I went, was to watch Mamma Mia 2 at my local Cineworld in St Helens and had to pay around £11. I generally stay clear of the 3D films because of the extra cost. Don’t even get me started on the price of the food and drink which I avoid like the plague. I was tempted to get the Unlimited card, but personally I don’t think it would be worth it. I think, with the prices as they are, more and more people are opting to use shall we say certain streaming boxes and computer software to watch films for free and in the comfort of their own home. Obviously, there are definite legal and moral issues with doing this, but with the Govt bringing in legislation to try and crack down on this what is in effect piracy, there will always be people who will circumvent such laws and barriers to get the free stuff.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 24, 2018 17:13:55 GMT
Where I live it costs around 6.50€ when booking online in advance (around 8€ at box office on the day).
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Post by Deleted on Aug 24, 2018 17:14:31 GMT
My 2 local Vue cinemas have dropped their ticket prices to £5.99 for any film on any day which I’ve been taking advantage of lately. They’re more of a hassle for me to get to and aren’t as nice as the nearest Odeon but I try and save as much as I can.
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Post by alece10 on Aug 24, 2018 17:25:25 GMT
Last time I went to the cinema it was three and eleven pence and on a Saturday if you took some PG tips packet tops you got in for free to the kids club.
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Post by crowblack on Aug 24, 2018 17:28:30 GMT
A friend with kids has one for the Odeon, but I don't think this Cineworld is going to have enough of the more artsy stuff to make it worthwhile for me - it's in a retail park so the meeting friends/social aspect is limited to fast food and popcorn. Unlike theatre, I don't go to the cinema on my own unless it's for a Q&A.
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Post by kathryn on Aug 24, 2018 17:34:30 GMT
Some of the Cineworlds are quite good for the artsy stuff - much better than my local Odeon, anyway. I think local management actually gets a say, instead of it all being centrally programmed.
Certainly since I switched to Limitless I've seen fewer of the smaller films. But the Odeon is a 10 minute walk away instead of an hour on the train...
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Post by showgirl on Aug 24, 2018 18:37:09 GMT
Cineworld is always dearer when there is no competition nearby - as is the case with my nearest - hence I never go there. I used to go for free previews if I could get a ticket but since I've had a Curzon Cult membership (expensive but includes any number of standard films per year at any location), I haven't needed to visit other chains much; nor would I want to, given what I already pay Curzon.
However, as they don't show everything I want to see, I also have a PH membership but try to stick to the cheaper "Silver Screen" performances if I do go; I also use Odeon and Vue very occasionally but again, only if I can get a deal or very cheap ticket. The more I use my Curzon membership, the cheaper the unit price per film becomes, though I won't see any old thing just to drive down my average.
The only cinema within walking distance is an Everyman and it's unaffordably expensive, which is frustrating given that I've been a keen cinema-goer for years and never had a site so close to home before.
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Post by dontdreamit on Aug 24, 2018 18:50:42 GMT
It’s over £20 to take Young Dream to the cinema. However our local view do £4.99 tickets on Mondays if you register with them, and I also have Meercat Movies which gives you 2 for 1 tickets on a Tuesday and Wednesday. I bought a 1 day travel insurance in the UK for about £2 and that gave me access to a year of the promotion!
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Post by Deleted on Aug 24, 2018 19:17:44 GMT
My local Empire does £3.95 tickets on a Tuesday and £8 as standard every other day, which for London is pretty good. I always shudder at the Vue prices, and all the prices for London Film Festival showings!
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Post by anthony40 on Aug 24, 2018 20:56:12 GMT
There was a whole feature story on this exact issue on The One Show tonight.
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Post by ellie1981 on Aug 24, 2018 21:46:27 GMT
I pay the £2 uplift for the West End Cineworld, which also gives access to £5 tickets at the Picturehouse Central. The West India Quay branch near Canary Wharf tends to show the artsy stuff too - I seem to have the best of all worlds with it as I live in Greenwich and work central - The O2, Canary Wharf, Leicester Square (with added 4DX seats for a mere £4.23) and the Picturehouse... plus my work scheme gets 30% off the annual pass.
I also have BFI and Prince Charles membership, where the latter does £1 screenings of random old films every week for members.
What I’m saying is that I like going to the cinema. A lot. The rest of the public who go a couple of times a year, spends a small fortune on 3D uplifts, popcorn (yuck) where half of it ends up on the floor and £15 a ticket - you fund my bargains. Not dissimilar to the premium price tickets at the theatre I suppose.
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Post by Jon on Aug 24, 2018 22:35:53 GMT
Subscription service like Unlimited and Limitless does prove that cinema can be affordable if you go often, even membership schemes provide free cinema tickets a year plus discounts and preview screenings. Even if you don’t go for membership schemes, there are work perks which have discounted tickets but also things like Groupon which offer 5-7 tickets for £20-25 and Mars Sweet Sundays which offer a ticket on a Sunday if you buy a certain number of sweets
It’s like theatre tickets, it’s expensive if you don’t go often but it’s not impossible to get cheap tickets,
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Post by crowblack on Aug 24, 2018 23:12:16 GMT
I get the impression from all this that we're really getting gouged by the chains up here in the North-West!
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Post by crowblack on Aug 24, 2018 23:20:11 GMT
Thanks - i'll catch up on it.
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Post by ruby on Aug 24, 2018 23:43:57 GMT
I was considering the Odeon unlimited card but as far as I can see it doesn't include "event cinema" ie theatre broadcasts. I have a free Showcase Insider card which brings the price of these down to about £12, better than my local Vue which charges around £15 - 20.
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Post by showgirl on Aug 25, 2018 4:50:24 GMT
Cineworld's subscription scheme doesn't work for me as they show few of the films I want to see - plus all their sites are absolutely disgusting, especially my nearest (Crawley, which isn't even that near): dark, dingy, reeking of fast food, filthy, dirty seats you don't want to sit in until you've checked but which you can't see properly in the low light, toilet floors your feet stick to because so much sticky drink has been spilled on them, long queues for service, unattended children running riot in the foyer, etc - I could go on!
I do know all these things are a reflection of Cineworld's customer base but they could address and improve some aspects, particularly cleanliness, lighting and service.
Curzon sites however are generally a pleasure to visit and most PH cinemas are pretty decent though don't match up to Curzon. Can't speak for the unaffordable Everymans.
Where I volunteer there is a scheme offering discounted tickets for various chains but no use to me as they don't include concessions so an adult ticket would still cost more than I'd pay directly as a senior - really frustrating and puzzling.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 25, 2018 8:26:20 GMT
My home town has a town centre chain cinema, costs £8 to £11 and I've not yet figured out why the variation though I assume it'll be to do with time of day and maybe even day of the week. They'll also validate your parking ticket if you go after 6pm and park at the shopping centre. There's a different chain cinema two miles out of town (but surrounded by housing and near a major business park) which does Tuesday tickets for a fiver or normal tickets for basically the same cost as the other cinema (maybe slightly less?), but parking is free any time of day (though good luck finding a space on a Tuesday evening).
I have a "see as much as you want for a single monthly payment" card for the town centre chain which costs about £20 so pays for itself as long as I see a minimum of two films a month. I do have to pay for event cinema, like Everybody's Talking About Jamie, but where a non-card holder would have been paying £20-£25, I paid just under £10, which is nonetheless a bargain considering I also saw at least two films that month.
I don't think we get the full range of films at the cinema to whom I have pledged my allegiance, but as long as all the major musicals and horror movies (and I do still see some of the major comic book movies, though by no means all of them anymore) keep going there, it suits me just fine. Though I have yet to be a member for a full year, so may yet find that they're disappointing when it comes to smaller movies or awards season.
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Post by joem on Aug 25, 2018 8:36:48 GMT
It is normally cheaper to buy a dvd than to go to the cinema.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 25, 2018 9:32:14 GMT
But then you either have to keep it or dispose of it, sooo.....
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Post by Deleted on Aug 25, 2018 9:40:52 GMT
Cineworld's subscription scheme doesn't work for me as they show few of the films I want to see - plus all their sites are absolutely disgusting, especially my nearest (Crawley, which isn't even that near): dark, dingy, reeking of fast food, filthy, dirty seats you don't want to sit in until you've checked but which you can't see properly in the low light, toilet floors your feet stick to because so much sticky drink has been spilled on them, long queues for service, unattended children running riot in the foyer, etc - I could go on! . I was a member for two years as I thought it was a great way of saving money and it encouraged me to go more often at first. After the first six months though I found exactly the same. There just weren’t enough films on to make me feel it was worth taking a punt on them. We paid £14 each at the local Odeon to see Mamma Mia: HWGA recently and I was shook. After buying a drink each and taking parking into account you’re looking at spending almost £40 on a date night. Screened filmings of shows inevitably cost more per ticket so for that reason I’d always rather go to London and watch it live if possible instead.
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Post by ctas on Aug 25, 2018 9:46:30 GMT
I have an unlimited card for Cineworld and live near a very large cinema that shows almost everything and it’s been a godsend. I love seeing films and they discount all the live theatre things too (for example, I believe I paid £4 for Newsies) so I’ve saved a lot of money. Last year I had the card I saved almost £200, this year might be more. But I do miss the days of going to the little local cinema In Aberystwyth for £4!
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