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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jan 4, 2020 17:25:50 GMT
We just had one of these open in Manchester (October I think) and I haven’t been yet. It’s quite expensive as ours only has “premium” seating which is the sofas and armchairs and it’s pricey at about £12 compared with £4.99 at Vue Printworks. So I’m wondering how worth it it is? Looking at their website they have over 30 venues so I’m assuming someone must have been. I’m interested to know about: Screen size (I know this will be dependant on venue but I’m expecting it to be very small) Comfort (is it really squashed with not much legroom?) How does the at seat bar service work? isn’t it hugely annoying to have people ordering stuff while the film is on? thank you! www.everymancinema.com/venues-list
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Post by showgirl on Jan 4, 2020 17:50:03 GMT
Everyman is the one chain in my area which I won't use as their prices are so astronomical. I also dislike their emphasis on a supposedly enhanced experience about which you have no choice, other than not buying their exorbitantly-priced refreshments and booking the "cheaper" seats, which at my local site are about the price you quote, BurlyBeaR - the premium seats cost about twice that and of course Everyman are big on settees, sharing platters, bottles of wine, etc, served at those seats. Forget the poor filmgoer who simply wishes to see the film without noise, mess, smells, risk of spillages etc and as cheaply as possible.
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Post by longinthetooth on Jan 4, 2020 23:10:06 GMT
I've been to our local Everyman a couple of times. We don't have a Vue, but I don't recall Everyman's prices were much more than the Odeon.
Everyone seemed to order their drinks etc before they went in. The ushers then brought them to the seats - there are individual armchairs for those customers who are alone and don't wish to share a sofa with a total stranger. There are tables attached to the arms of the seats. Thankfully when I was there no one ordered food - although I believe pizza and similar "refreshments" were available, and most of the serving was completed by the time the film started, apart from the odd latecomer. No one seemed to order anything once the film itself was under way.
The worst food experience I had in a cinema was in the Odeon, where three people brought in their own KFC, chips and ketchup, and would have left the detritus behind if I and another person hadn't said something.
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Post by Jon on Jan 5, 2020 0:23:46 GMT
Everyman isn’t aiming for the multiplex crowd, more the upmarket crowd who are willing to pay a premium for the experience. It clearly works since they’re expanding at a decent rate.
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Post by juicy_but_terribly_drab on Jan 5, 2020 0:28:11 GMT
They're very expensive and I don't think it's worth it. I only ever use them if there's an indie film that's not showing anywhere else near by in London but I've got a couple of cinemas near me in Nottingham that are a fiver for a ticket and show a lot of smaller films now so I doubt I'll need to go to another one again. I did have a hot dog though and it was pretty good but again expensive.
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Post by Jon on Jan 5, 2020 0:33:51 GMT
£12 seems like a bargain for Everyman, the ones in places like Broadgate and Canary Wharf are nearer £18-20. I think they’re the only major chain that doesn’t have a Central London presence but I’m sure if a site became available, they’d jump at it.
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Post by showgirl on Jan 5, 2020 5:23:49 GMT
Everyman isn’t aiming for the multiplex crowd, more the upmarket crowd who are willing to pay a premium for the experience. It clearly works since they’re expanding at a decent rate. But this is exactly the issue: firstly, not everyone wants -or can afford - a "premium experience" and secondly, if Everyman expand into areas under-served by other chains or without a cinema at all, this makes it less likely that another provider will open nearby, so the less upmarket audience will still have nowhere to go and less hope that this will change. Ironically I now live nearer to a cinema than ever before in my 60+ years, yet because Everyman took over what had previously been a pleasant site belonging to a small chain and transmogrified it almost beyond recognition, I no longer wish or can afford to go there. I remember walking there (only 20 minutes away - what a luxury this was) to see an early morning midweek performance only to find that Everyman had taken over and the price had risen by about 20% - and that was several years ago; things have worsened considerably since. I was so shocked that instead of having the sense to walk away, I paid up, and was then distracted by the thought of being so stupid. Even then, I could see a film in central London for a couple of pounds less than at this cinema and at today's prices I can probably see 3 for the Everyman ticket cost. Besides, what is a "premium experience" and is what's offered actually what keen cinemagoers want? Were I to pay more, I'd want the guarantee of NO talking, mobile use, eating noisy/smelly food, risk of spills from others' drinks and no seat-kicking. No money in that for cinemas so they are never going to offer it.
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Post by showgirl on Jan 5, 2020 5:32:00 GMT
NB: Just checked prices for my local Everyman: assuming not booking online (extra £1.90 for non-members but risky simply to turn up and hope as they are small auditoria) and the cheapest concession is £11.40. Even Silver Screen performances are £9.20 for seniors.
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jan 5, 2020 5:42:36 GMT
£12 seems like a bargain for Everyman, the ones in places like Broadgate and Canary Wharf are nearer £18-20. I think they’re the only major chain that doesn’t have a Central London presence but I’m sure if a site became available, they’d jump at it. I think the price for Manchester is probably being heavily affected by the £4.99 Vue Printworks prices. I don’t know if that’s a marketing strategy by Vue but it’s been that price since they took the site over from Odeon. Long may it continue.
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Post by hannechalk on Jan 5, 2020 15:13:51 GMT
I've been once, to the one in Bristol, and I enjoyed it. Comfortable seating, we just didn't know we could order drinks and food to our sofa. Staff kept getting an order wrong for one person, and then it was a bit annoying to have them walking back and forth and having hushed conversations with that one person. We said we'd make it a regular date-thing but never got round to it. I haven't been to the one in Liverpool yet, but when I looked at seating, they only have a limited number of seats for one person, and you can't 'buy' half a sofa.
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Post by showgirl on Jan 5, 2020 15:26:44 GMT
£12 seems like a bargain for Everyman, the ones in places like Broadgate and Canary Wharf are nearer £18-20. I think they’re the only major chain that doesn’t have a Central London presence but I’m sure if a site became available, they’d jump at it. I think the price for Manchester is probably being heavily affected by the £4.99 Vue Printworks prices. I don’t know if that’s a marketing strategy by Vue but it’s been that price since they took the site over from Odeon. Long may it continue. It's great if there is local competition (and choice for the customer, too, of course), but it's very obvious that Vue doesn't care where there isn't. In Croydon, for instance, though they've just introduced their "£6.99, all day, every day" deal, which I've already used at Fulham Broadway, there's no hope of a £4.99 version. Staff where I volunteer have access to discounted cinema vouchers for most chains (of course Curzon and Everyman aren't included - drat) and I expect others here are familiar with this benefit. For Vue the discounted tickets are reasonably-priced but with a 2-tier system as some sites - even several in London - already offer a very cheap deal, making the discounted price little cheaper, whereas others don't. I bought a couple of the discounted tickets to use when my sister and I visited Cheshire Oaks and as I hadn't known then that Vue offered a ticket for as little as £4.99 anywhere, I was surprised to find that my vouchers saved 50p only.
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Post by crowblack on Jan 6, 2020 17:12:04 GMT
But this is exactly the issue: firstly, not everyone wants -or can afford - a "premium experience" These 'premium' prices - £11-plus - are less than "normal" for a bog standard multiplex 2D here in my Northern home town! I've just checked, and tonight my local Cineworld, glamorously located on the edge an industrial estate and serving the large council estate my Mum grew up on, is charging £12.35 for Little Women and Cats (2D, normal seating) and £14.85 for Star Wars, 2D, normal seating, larger screen. NT Live is around £24, and you have to go into town for that. The regular price at Picturehouse here is £12.20 plus booking fee, and the Odeon is similar. Picturehouse's 'bargain Monday' is now £7.80. It's often cheaper to go to the theatre. (And yes, the cinemas have been pretty deserted on the few times I've been! The only packed house was for The Favourite, and that had a much more middle-class, middle-aged crowd).
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jan 6, 2020 19:03:06 GMT
Before Vue brought in this £4.99 “All Day Every Day” thing the prices here were similar crowblack . And now prices at Odeon at the Great Northern have come down to £6-7. VUE pricing has been a game changer in terms of bringing cinema prices down in Manchester City centre. If you have the meerkat movie thing (which I do) two people can see a film on Monday and Tuesday for £4.99 for two. Tix at VUE at the Lowry Salford are almost double the price. As are tix for HOME cinema which i can walk to from my apartment in about 4 minutes but at twice the price and they don’t do buckets of cola? No ta!
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