Silver Screens: A Century of Cinemagoing

From the picture palaces of the past to modern multiplexes...

The cinema has always been so much more than just a place to watch films. At the heights of its powers, the silver screen stood for spectacle, sophistication, electricity and elegance as well as entertainment, and the very venues themselves were star attractions. These architectural marvels stood proud in cities and towns up and down the country, enthralling audiences in their thousands in the days when "going to the pictures" was a national pastime.

For over a century, cinema has endured, and cinemas have changed with the times. The rise of television, video and home cinemas may have splintered the cultural dominance of the movies while bringing films to smaller and more convenient screens, but the thrill of the communal experience remains - as do many of the monumental structures themselves, whether they have been converted into bingo halls, renovated into plush modern picture houses, or left to loom over the high street.

This collection celebrates the cinema as both a cultural icon and a haven for generations of starry-eyed dreamers, and documents the changing face of filmgoing from the bygone bioscopes and the lavish picture palaces of yesteryear to the sticky-floored multiplexes of today. So dim the lights, grab your popcorn, and lose yourself in the magic of the silver screen.

30 items in this collection
Cinema-goers escape their worries by stepping into the glorious Art Deco luxury of the Odeon picture palaces.

Odeon Cavalcade

Moviewatch [17/01/93]

Dawson's Electric Cinema

The Gaumont Palace on Union Street in Plymouth is closing its doors for refurbishment.

Plymouth's Gaumont Cinema Closure

One of the most quaint cinemas you're ever likely to see, The Tudor is a loving recreation of, and tribute to, the classic cinemas of a bygone era.

Tudor Style

Dangerously addicted to old movies? This is a case for Dr BFI, as demonstrated in this 1970s animated promo

The Dream of Arthur Sleap

Movies on TV (Look Here)

Enter the Dream-House: Memories of Cinema in its Heyday

Filmmaker Alan Stingemore captures a seaside cinema in crisis

Margate's Plaza Cinema

The Rise and Fall of the Dream Palace

The end of an era with two former Odeon cinemas facing the bulldozers

Ramsgate's Odeon and the demolition of a Herne Bay cinema

Filmmaker Alan Stingemore seeks out cinemas past and present in the Kentish towns of Faversham and Sittingbourne, capturing a variety of architectural styles and the era of bingo taking over the big screen.

Cinemas in Faversham and Sittingbourne

It Happened at the Club!

Armchair Odeons

Running a Cinema

Video Piracy

Family Viewing Video Rental Shop

The Electric Paradise

Q visits the QFT

Regional Film Theatre - Foundation Stone Ceremony 

Border Television's local news looks in on the Whitehaven Film Theatre, the latest film venue at the Civic Hall.

Opening of Whitehaven Film Theatre

Alan Stingemore's short film captures the final years of the Rio Cinema at 27 Broadway, Sheerness.

An Art Deco cinema in Sheerness

Tdk Video Tape: Pink Panther

Moviewatch [21/03/93]

The BBC throws open its doors at Ealing Studios for a nostalgic exhibition which features cameras, actors, jazzy wigs and a Dalek

London cinemas and an Open Day at Ealing Studios

A sad end awaits Medway's forlorn looking cinemas and theatres. Which ones will succumb to the bulldozers and which will survive?

Various Cinemas in the Medway towns

Loftus Cinema: The Golden Years

Herne Bay after the cinemas have gone

Relive the 1980s in this nostalgic film from Alan Stingemore - featuring a variety of flagship cinemas, the relocation of Eros as well as a few cinemas that have since disappeared

Unveiling Eros and West End cinemas

Join Captain Birdseye in Guildford as he appears at a fun run through the town - and guess what's showing at the Odeon

Captain Birdseye in Guildford