While I enjoy company, I’m not the kind of person who’s ever felt uncomfortable
about going places by myself. Whether it’s a gig, a restaurant or another
country, it’s never been a big deal if I couldn’t find anyone who wanted to
share the adventure. However, I realised a long time ago, that other people
could feel awkward about my solo presence, as if it were a problem that they
were expected to fix. This was particularly noticeable in restaurants; when I
used to travel for work, I sometimes felt inclined to eat somewhere other than
my hotel room. On several occasions, the discomfort of the servers was
unmissable. Whether they were unhappy that I was taking up a table that could
have accommodated two people or, as I suspect, they were dreading a moment when
I would burst into noisy and unhygienic tears at having been stood up, the
solicitude of the repeated “Are you all right?” was not conducive to good
digestion.
By contrast, the shadowy, half-illusory world of the cinema has no
such qualms about opening its doors to visitors, whether they arrive in ones,
twos or severals. That, together with the allure of disappearing into another
world for a couple of hours has long ensured the popularity of a night at the
movies. But are the pics set to become the pastime of a bygone age, as quaint as
musical evenings around the family piano or hitting one another with
quarterstaffs? With the availability of large screens and movies on demand, do
the cinemas offer enough to compete with Netflix (plus optional chill)?
Troublingly, my visits to the local cinema often find me the sole viewer for a
showing; unless other screenings are filled to capacity, I wonder how long it
will be before board meetings take place in which phrases like “economic
viability” and “margins on concessions” hover gloomily around the table like
harbingers of the theatre’s doom.
Sadly, for many cinemas it is, of course,
already too late. In them, we have not only lost access to local movie
screenings, but also, in many cases, we have lost beautiful and historical
buildings. This was the case with one cinema close to my heart - the lovely art
deco Coliseum, which graced the town of Porthmadog, north Wales, since 1931.
Since that time, it was a focal point for entertainment in the town, as well as
being the venue for the screening rushes of cult TV show The Prisoner, which was
filmed in nearby Portmeirion. Despite a spirited campaign - which began shortly
after the Coliseum closed in spring 2011 - to restore and refurbish the Coliseum,
it was recently confirmed that its demolition would now go ahead.
Alison Raouf
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