- Everyman Media Group has acquired Tivoli cinemas in Bath and Cheltenham
- The two venues had been beforehand owned and operated by Empire Cinemas
- Irish cinema operator, Omniplex, not too long ago took over 5 former Empire websites
Everyman Media Group has purchased two image homes within the west of England after the previous proprietor went into administration.
The unbiased chain has acquired two Tivoli cinemas in Bath and Cheltenham, which had been beforehand owned and operated by Empire Cinemas.
Empire collapsed into administration in early July after fighting attendance figures as cost-of-living pressures hammered demand.
Takeover: Everyman Media Group has acquired two Tivoli cinemas in Bath and Cheltenham, which had been beforehand owned and operated by Empire Cinemas
Around 150 jobs had been instantly misplaced and 6 of the group’s cinemas needed to shut their doorways, with one other eight put underneath menace of closure.
Last week, Ireland’s largest cinema operator, Omniplex, took over 5 of Empire’s remaining websites.
The deal will see Omniplex spend £22.5million shopping for and refitting the cinemas within the coming 18 months.
Alex Scrimgeour, chief government of Everyman, stated: ‘We are delighted to announce the acquisition of those cinemas within the historic metropolis of Bath and the colourful city of Cheltenham.
‘We pleasure ourselves on offering an elevated cinema expertise, making these venues a terrific addition to the Everyman portfolio.
‘We sit up for welcoming the area people to our latest places on this thrilling new chapter for the enterprise.’
Everyman’s buy at a difficult time for Britain’s beleaguered cinema sector, which remains to be struggling to rebound from the Covid-19 pandemic.
The ‘Barbenheimer’ phenomenon gave a much-needed carry in the course of the summer season when audiences crowded theatres to look at the Barbie and Oppenheimer movies back-to-back.
Everyman greater than doubled its month-to-month revenues and achieved a report week of admissions in July after the 2 motion pictures had been launched on the identical date.
In the earlier six months, the London-based agency’s turnover fell by £2.4million year-on-year to £38.3million due partly to an absence of main blockbuster releases.
Over the identical interval, earnings earlier than nasties slipped to £5.8million because the prior yr’s efficiency additionally benefited from a decrease VAT fee.
Everyman forecasts a a lot stronger second-half end result, supported by box-office hits just like the historic epic Napoleon, Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon, and the fantasy musical Wonka.
The firm’s gross sales between January and the top of August had been 13.3 per cent greater than in the identical interval final yr at £60.2million.
Everyman Media Group shares had been 0.8 per cent decrease at 62p on Friday afternoon, which means they’ve slumped by round two-thirds because the starting of 2020.