VERY BIG!!! (2006) Otis Gen2 At VUE Cinema In Swansea,Wales
Vue cinema
Jumanji movie!!!!
Gang film Blue Story banned from Vue cinemas after mass brawl outside screening
Blue Story, a BBC-backed gang film, has been banned from Vue cinemas following a mass brawl involving youths armed with knives and machetes outside a screening in Birmingham.
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Parents' rage as Carmarthen Vue cinema charges 'double'
Parents have criticised a cinema chain, claiming it is almost doubling its charges depending on location.
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Vue Westfield London before premiere WFE
WFE
COOL CAB! UNKNOWN WHEELCHAIR LIFT AT VUE CINEMA-HALMINTON-EDINBRUGH-UK
Love that chime.
VUE CINEMA UNIT.MOV
Room with a Vue
We are really pleased to announce our new venue for the Pretty Vacant project, situated in a large empty unit space at the Warner Village.
Originally planned for Stoke Town, we faced many months of delays due to logistical problems, however having since moved to Newcastle Town we have had instant access to the new location and have began work immediately. Our large scale celebration of local people has had a terrific response with many people enquiring in how to take part.
Over the coming weeks we will be embarking on a large graffiti back drop and photographing the locality, which will become a vast floor display for our Local Hero cut outs to sit on.
The public are invited to view the work in progress through the windows and we hope to open up the space for a celebration event when the project is complete.
Like Crazy Q&A European Première @ Vue Cinema Leicester square [1 of 2]
Like Crazy is a 2011 American drama film. The film was directed by Drake Doremus and stars Anton Yelchin, Felicity Jones and Jennifer Lawrence. The film won the Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic Film at the 27th Sundance Film Festival, and Jones won a Special Grand Jury Prize for acting in a dramatic film. On 13/10/11 Director Drake and Actress Felicity Jones did a quick Q&A at the Vue Cinema. Enjoy
Mass cinema brawl in Birmingham (1) (UK) - Sky & BBC News - 24th November 2019
Police officers were among those attacked at a cinema complex, where several mass fights broke out, with several machetes used. Weekend hooliganism again.
For what happened next, see here:
Street Scenes Swansea
This video is about a brisk walk through the streets of Swansea City on a cloudy cold day.
Easter Bank Holiday Revellers On Broad Street
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ID: 1602090
Revellers came out in force on the eve of Easter Sunday during the Bank Holiday on Broad Street in Birmingham as the 4-day religious break continued.
Several partygoers had their fair share of fun, some too much as one man was seen falling to the ground and attended to by members of the public and then paramedics stretchered him to an awaiting ambulance close by. Other sights included three friends sitting on the pavement, one tucking into a takeaway as the other 2 had a rest against a shop front. A woman in a white dress seemed to have had a wardrobe malfunction as her bra was out for all to see. Two female police officers led away a man who had been arrested for an unknown reason along the popular nightclub strip.
Revellers are expected to continue the party on Easter Sunday night with the knowledge of most having a lie in on Bank Holiday Monday.
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Inside Indie Movie Theaters’ Battle to Survive
Nestled at the foot of a large hill on the edge of downtown Providence, R.I., Cable Car Cinema was known to local moviegoers as ”the one with the couches.” That was a charitable description. They were love seats, really — perfect if you were with a date but awkward if you went to see a movie with a friend or found yourself seated next to a stranger.
Despite, or perhaps because of, its idiosyncratic seating, Cable Car inspired fierce devotion among its regulars, a collection of Brown and Rhode Island School of Design students, professors, artists and cinephiles.
“It was a place you went to commune with fellow movie lovers,” says Mike Ritz, a longtime patron. “You didn’t go there to see ‘Spider-Man.’ They played art films that challenged you, that provoked emotion, that made you think.”
Last May, after 42 years of screening everything from “Pulp Fiction” to “RBG,” the Cable Car ran its projector for a final time and closed its doors forever. The business was profitable, but owners Daniel Kamil and Emily Steffian could not come to an agreement with RISD, the building’s owner, on a deal that would enable them to buy the theater outright. Kamil and Steffian concluded that in order to remain competitive they needed to expand beyond their tiny single-screen space.
“We were looking at a future where it was going to be harder and harder to just break even,” Kamil told Variety. “We bought the theater because we loved movies and we wanted to preserve a local icon, but we couldn’t make it work.”
The closure left a void in the tight-knit community of indie film fans, one that has yet to be filled. ”I kept having this really unhealthy fantasy that some miracle would happen and someone would swoop in and save it at the last minute,” says Cable Car regular Anna Macgregor Robin. “You know, like in the movies.”
But no white knights came to the rescue, and the theater has become a prime example of the challenges facing independently owned movie houses. Confronted with aging audiences, competition from streaming services and theater chains boasting recliner seats and other amenities, many of these exhibitors balance precariously on a knife edge between popping more popcorn and being forced to turn off the marquee lights.
“It’s a tough business,” says Eric Handler, an exhibition industry analyst at MKM Partners. “Your revenues are inconsistent. Your rent keeps going up. Unless you have some deep-pocketed investor, you don’t have the capital to do what they’re doing in theater chains by investing in high-end food items and fancier seating.”
Independent theater owners have been forced to come up with creative ways to stay solvent.
Some have transitioned into nonprofits; others have embarked on GoFundMe campaigns to finance renovations. Newt Wallen, head of operations at the Anthony Wayne Theater, a movie palace in Wayne, Pa., that’s grown ragged around the edges, has been soliciting donations from patrons who live in the cinema’s Main Line neighborhood in hopes of installing new leather seats and carpeting, painting the lobby and sprucing up the screens. He wants to raise $2 million, but declined to say how close he is to reaching that goal.
“I’m painting, I’m fixing the plumbing, but there’s only so much I can do,” says Wallen. “I’m playing on people’s sympathies and hoping they donate. But sometimes it’s hard. Sometimes I feel like I’m screaming at the sky.”
Despite the challenges, a large number of independently owned cinemas still exist. The exhibition business in the United States is dominated by three major circuits — Regal, AMC and Cinemark — that collectively control 50% of the roughly 41,000 screens in the country. But once you get past these juggernauts there are a number of smaller circuits and mom-and-pop theaters. Of the more than 600 members of the National Assn. of Theatre Owners, the leading exhibition industry trade group, 414 boast fewer than 10 screens and 91 have single-screen venues.
“The challenges and opportunities vary by market,” says Patrick Corcoran, a spokesperson for NATO. “Business tends to be hyperlocal and impacted by what’s happening in their economies.”
That means that ticket sales can be heavily influenced by a factory closing or a new company planting its headquarters down the street, not just what movies are hitting screens.
The castle cinema Swansea. collecting my bike in town
.the castle cinema opened in 1913.it was the only building left standing in Swansea's castle Street vicinity after the Nazi German Luftwaffe bombing raids during the second world war.
Dan Osborne junto com os Dreamboys
Dan Osborne foi o vencedor da categoria “Fittest Man” da Revista Attitude
Dan Osborne esta entre nove vencedores dos “Atitude Awards” deste ano a aparecer na capa da última edição da Revista Attitude.
Osborne foi nomeado o Homen Mais Apto (“Fittest Man”) do Ano em Londres a noite da passada segunda feira (13).
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HangDr Promotional Video ft. Dan Osborne
Once in Royal David's City
TED16 Opening Night Live - 16 February - Swansea Odeon
For one night only you can watch the opening night of TED16 in Swansea's Odeon cinema - 16 February - 7pm. For more information or to purchase tickets visit
Salsa Performance, SU Dance Soc, 'A Night of Culture' - Swansea MCF