Will Bain,Enterprise presenter and
Emer Moreau,Enterprise reporter
The boss of one of many UK’s largest cinema chains says he doesn’t see streaming providers and residential leisure as competitors.
Tim Richards, the founder and chief government of Vue Worldwide, says movie studios tried to “circumvent” cinemas throughout the pandemic however misplaced “a whole lot of tens of millions of {dollars}” in consequence.
“I believe the studios actually realized that we’re in a single small ecosystem, all of us want one another,” he advised the BBC’s Big Boss Interview podcast.
Rival cinema chains have a constructive relationship too, he says: “We’re pretty open when it comes to buying and selling finest practices. We need to have a message that cinemas are an awesome place to have a great time.”
Richards spoke of the turbulence of the final 5 years for the movie business.
Vue went from having its finest yr ever in 2019, to being “successfully closed for nearly two years” throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, to grappling with actors’ and writers’ strikes which shut down production for nearly another year.
Vue made a pre-tax lack of £91.8m within the 12 months to 30 November 2024 in contrast with the yr prior, and mentioned {that a} lower in income was “principally pushed by decrease admissions”.
Globally, the cinema business has been seeing change, with massive names similar to Cineworld struggling. It filed for chapter within the US in 2022, and in 2024, went in to administration within the UK. Since then, it has carried out restructuring of its debt, and shutting a few of its branches, to assist it alongside.
Whereas Richards was attempting to determine the best way to forestall Vue from going underneath, or from having to put off any of its workers, streaming providers like Netflix saw their subscriber numbers explode.
“I had a singular focus: save the corporate and save all of our 10,000 workers,” he says.
“When you may have a mission like that, failure shouldn’t be actually an choice, as a result of the results are too excessive.”

At the same time as cinemas started to reopen, business figures questioned whether or not the mannequin of movie launch had modified for good. Movies like Marvel’s Black Widow noticed minimal theatrical runs as streaming platforms tried to push their authentic productions.
Extra just lately, titles like Ok-Pop Demon Hunters and The Thursday Homicide Membership are taking part in for only a few weeks in cinemas, regardless of proving to be hugely popular.
However Richards is unfazed. Vue returned to pre-pandemic buying and selling ranges this yr and is anticipating subsequent summer season to be the corporate’s largest ever.
He’s emphatic that there’ll all the time be an urge for food for the massive display: “Through the pandemic, there was a rise with subscription providers as a result of folks had no selection. However that has not continued.
“I’ve by no means checked out what occurs within the residence as being competitors. Our largest, most frequent clients are Netflix subscribers or Disney Plus subscribers. Individuals who love motion pictures love motion pictures in all codecs.”
The Hollywood strikes, too, he says, have been a provide challenge, not a requirement one. “We have by no means had a requirement challenge.”
Richards clearly is aware of the ecosystem of movies inside out. Earlier than founding Vue (then Spean Bridge Cinemas) in 1999, he was a senior government at Warner Brothers, working the studio’s personal cinema chain, Warner Village. Spean Bridge purchased Warner Village’s 36 cinemas in 2003, and the Vue model was born.
“The headline within the enterprise part of the Instances was: ‘Unknown Bit Participant Buys Warner Brothers,'” he recollects with fun.
Leisure business squeezed
On account of cost-of-living pressures persisting, many components of the leisure business are seeing income decelerate as folks reduce on discretionary spending.
Added to this are rising operational prices: a rise within the minimal wage and better employer Nationwide Insurance coverage contributions.
“We now have accomplished our very, easiest to not cross on these prices to our clients,” Richards mentioned. “And we have not. And we have taken a small hit as a consequence, however we’re hoping that the quantity which we have seen as a consequence will observe it.”
Nonetheless, he says, the leisure business has been “squeezed… and type of attacked in some cases”.
Authorities selections have “harm the folks they’re attempting to assist”, in his view.
What is the business’s message forward of the upcoming Price range? “Please do not contact [us] once more.”
And whereas Richards would not imagine that streamers are poaching his clients, he says he does fear about “any individual turning proper and going to a theme park or a soccer sport or one thing else”.
However it’s not a case of youngsters and younger adults sitting at residence as an alternative of going out. “They’re much more social than earlier generations, and that has proven in our attendance with loads of our motion pictures,” he says.
And what’s his personal favorite film?
He responds diplomatically. “I see so much – a lot – of flicks each week.
“However I have a look at a film like One Battle After Another. And after I see a film like that, I’ve hope for the longer term as a result of it is such an unbelievable film. Unique IP, authentic story, extremely effectively accomplished.”
