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Forget luxury seats and popcorn buckets — cinema’s real advantage can’t be streamed

“Cinema is dead.”


It’s a line we’ve all heard — usually followed by a list of reasons why streaming, sofas and subscription services have supposedly won. But that argument often ignores something important: cinema’s greatest strengths were never about comfort or convenience in the first place.

Over the years, many industries have evolved quickly in response to digital change. Cinema, by comparison, is often portrayed as having stood still. In reality, what’s been overlooked is not what cinema lacks — but what it already does better than anything else.

Cinema brings people together in a way nothing else does

I was once at a screening where someone said:

“There’s nothing like a group of strangers, all there for the same reason, watching the same film.”

At the time it sounded slightly poetic — even a bit odd. But they were right.

For two hours, phones were away. No pausing. No second screens. Full attention. You could hear every laugh, every gasp, every moment of tension ripple across the room. Time felt suspended in a way that simply doesn’t happen at home.

That shared focus — the collective experience — is something streaming can’t replicate, no matter how good the TV or how big the sofa.

A screening becomes an event when people care

We once hosted a screening of The Crow. It’s not a film I’d personally put in my top ten — but that wasn’t the point.

For many people in the room, it clearly was.

Some turned up wearing T-shirts. Others talked passionately about Brandon Lee. There was a sense of tribute in the air. This wasn’t just a screening; it felt like a small act of collective homage.

This is something cinemas across the UK already see:

  • Prince Charles Cinema has built a reputation around turning films into events — sing-alongs, quotes shouted back at the screen, curated introductions.
  • Independent cinemas regularly host director intros, Q&As, themed nights and anniversaries, often drawing bigger crowds than standard listings.
  • Cult and classic titles frequently outperform expectations precisely because the audience chooses them.
  • These aren’t luxury experiences. They’re meaningful ones.

Cinema doesn’t need to compete with streaming — it can complement it

Streaming services aren’t the enemy. In many ways, they’ve helped this model.

Streaming has:

• Introduced new generations to older films
• Kept cult titles alive between theatrical runs
• Created demand for films people then want to see properly

Cinema can act as the front door, not the final destination.

A successful screening can spark renewed interest, conversation, rewatches and — yes — streaming views afterwards. One doesn’t cancel out the other.

Luxury isn’t the point — connection is

This isn’t an argument against comfortable seats or good food. Those things matter. But they’re not cinema’s defining feature.

Cinema’s real advantage is:

  • Shared attention
  • Collective emotion
  • A sense of occasion
  • People choosing to be there together


That’s not something you can stream.

As cinemas continue to evolve, the opportunity isn’t just to be more luxurious — it’s to be more human.

And that’s where cinema still has an edge.

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