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How Screenwave Is Going to Change the Cinema Industry

It’s expensive to put on a cult or classic screening.
Cinemas don’t want to take the risk.
And, right now, that makes perfect sense.

As I explained in my previous article the financial model actively discourages cinemas from programming cult, classic, or independent films. Minimum guarantees, upfront costs, and distributor pressure all push cinemas toward the “safe” option — even when audience demand says otherwise.

But the problem goes deeper than screening costs.

The industry is playing it safe — and everyone feels it

Film studios are understandably risk-averse. The result? A release calendar dominated by sequels, reboots, and rehashes:

  • Dune: Part Three
  • Jumanji 4
  • The Hunger Games: Sunrise on the Reaping
  • The Devil Wears Prada 2
  • Wuthering Heights


Even in 2025, the majority of the most heavily promoted films are remakes, sequels, or franchise extensions.

Don’t get me wrong — I’m excited for some of these.
 But they’re not original.
 They don’t create momentum.
 And they rarely define a generation.

Compare that to the late ’80s and early ’90s. Films from that era didn’t just entertain — they launched careers, created new genres, and reshaped cinema culture entirely. Many of today’s “classics” were once risks.

Indie films exist — but cinema isn’t opening the door

There is no shortage of brilliant independent and regional filmmaking today. In fact, streaming has helped many of these films find audiences.

Cinema hasn’t caught up.

The barriers to entry are still too high for:

  • UK regional films
  • First-time directors
  • Small international releases
  • Cult favourites that grew audiences after their initial release


In other countries, this works better.

Markets like France, South Korea, and parts of Scandinavia actively support locally produced films with:

  • Guaranteed screen quotas
  • Regional cinema funding
  • Strong audience-cinema relationships built around national and local storytelling


These films don’t just exist — they’re seen, discussed, and celebrated on the big screen.
In the UK, far too many of these films never make it past festivals or streaming algorithms.

This is where Screenwave steps in

Screenwave isn’t trying to replace cinemas. And we’re not asking them to gamble.

We’re changing the economics.

We:
• Prove demand before a screening is scheduled
• Secure funding upfront
• Show that people will actually buy tickets — not just say they’re interested

That changes everything.

Instead of guessing, cinemas know:

• The audience exists
• The costs are covered
• The screening has momentum before it’s even announced

This creates a risk-free environmentfor cinemas to:

• Programme cult and classic films
• Support independent and regional cinema
• Create genuinely exciting, community-led events

All without relying solely on box office “smashes” — which are becoming rarer as release windows shorten and attention fragments.

The bigger picture

Cinema doesn’t have a demand problem. It has a visibility and risk problem.

Screenwave is about unlocking what already exists:

  • The audience
  • The enthusiasm
  • The love of cinema as a shared experience


We’re still early. We have a long way to go. And we can’t do it alone.

If you care about cinema — not just opening weekend numbers — we need:

  • Cinemas willing to experiment
  • Distributors willing to evolve
  • Film fans willing to back what they want to see


Because the future of cinema won’t be saved by the next sequel alone.

It will be saved by giving people back a voice in what appears on the big screen.

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