High Wycombe cinema celebrates 25 years this weekend (From Bucks Free Press)
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High Wycombe cinema celebrates 25 years this weekend
10:18am Wednesday 26th September 2012 in Freetime By Rebecca Cain
High Wycombe cinema celebrates 25 years this weekend
ONCE known at the High Wycombe Six Empire is getting ready to celebrate its 25th year anniversary. The cinema launched in 1987 with a screening of Top Gun, which will once again be shown at the cinema during this celebratory weekend.
The cinema in Cressex was one of the first of its kind and had more than one million admissions in its first year. Paul Damms, the current general manager, has been there since 2007. A mad film fan, he started with 10 years experience and also a degree in film and media.
The 37-year-old said: "The reason why I joined Empire is because it was a relatively new company with a fresh approach to cinema."
And the reputation preceded the cinema. He said: "Obviously people called it The Wycombe Six. We now have eight screens so it doesn't really apply. People talked about it a lot, even when I didn't work here.
"Working at Uxbridge people would talk about Wycombe. Their customers would say how much they enjoyed it."
Paul said he thinks the cinema attracts an older audience and a more family orientated audience, than Cineworld, which is based in the centre of High Wycombe.
He said having another cinema in the town provides a big challenge but added: "We do kind of pull quite different audiences. There is room for both cinemas. We all enjoy that competitive edge it creates. I do and I know my team does. "
General Manager of Empire High Wycombe from back in 1987, Geoff Greaves said the timing of the opening was fundamental to the way the cinema grew over time.
He said it rebelled against the Americanised versions up the road.
Paul said: "Times have changed in regards to cinema. It used to be all about movies, obviously blockbusters are still around, but people want a lot more out of the cinema these days."
A new addition is live screenings from the Royal Opera House and the National Theatre, aiming to make it more inclusive.
And he said since he has been there the Harry Potter films have made the cinema the most busy and that The Inbetweeners was an unexpected success.
On Saturday they are celebrating by showing Harry Potter and the Philospher's Stone at 12pm, Mamma Mia at 3.30pm (both of which were hugely successful at the cinema), Dirty Dancing at 6pm and Top Gun at 8.30pm, which were both screened in 1987. These films will be at a reduced price of £3.95. For more details go to www.empirecinemas.co.uk
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Comments(10)
Zachary Woodman
says...
11:13am Wed 26 Sep 12
I still prefer coming here instead of the 12-screen in town because it's less crowded and has free parking!
I know I'm too young to remember the cinemas around Wycombe that preceded it. The Chiltern in Beaconsfield (Opened 1927) closed under the strain of competition from this place...
Mr Wicks
says...
8:15pm Wed 26 Sep 12
Looking forward to seeing Dirty Dancing there this weekend!
KentP
says...
11:28pm Wed 26 Sep 12
still, at least it was a better experience than superman 2 at the cinema in frogmoor... the scene where Vera is turned into a cyborg absolutely *terrified* the infant me!
KentP
says...
11:29pm Wed 26 Sep 12
Plazaman
says...
8:15am Thu 27 Sep 12
I visited them all on one hot day in June just to see what all the fuss was about. As I adored cinemas (both as places to watch films and as beautiful picture "palaces") I was very curious.
I found the other two (at Slough and Milton Keynes) hideous Americanised soulless places, but the Wycombe 6 was something else.
It had genuine style and finese. It was modern, yet contemporary with a striking front of house, carpeted foyers and beuatiful auditoria with moving screen curtains that went from side to side or up and down (like a waterfall).
It was proudly run by Cinema International Corporation.
Sadly, on my next visit a few years later, it had been taken over by UCI who ran the Americani(z)ed cinema at Milton Keynes, and they'd ripped up the carpets making the foyer look more like a "burger bar" and jammed open the screen curtains showing tacky "slides" instead - much to the disgust of the local management.
I never went back again and returned to my local Odeons. Until UCI took over these and did the same thing to them!
But the Wycombe 6 was what I hoped multiplexes would become in Britain. Stylish, modern and tradtional. And very "cinematic".
Happy birthday!
Plazaman
says...
8:18am Thu 27 Sep 12
KentP wrote:It would have been Superman 4. Superman 3 came out four years before Wycombe 6 opened!
gah, superman 3 even...
Plazaman
says...
8:24am Thu 27 Sep 12
Zachary Woodman wrote:Well, actually it was a CIC multiplex. UCI took over two and a half years after it opened and made them stop using the screen curtains.
I can remember I watched my first film here, which was "Toy Story" in the mid 1990s - Back then it was a UCI multiplex and the décor inside was rather different to what it was now. We had house tabs in each screen for starters!
I still prefer coming here instead of the 12-screen in town because it's less crowded and has free parking!
I know I'm too young to remember the cinemas around Wycombe that preceded it. The Chiltern in Beaconsfield (Opened 1927) closed under the strain of competition from this place...
The Chiltern Cinema was famous all over the UK, because (in the days before videotape) you could buy Super 8mm films from Beaconsfield and the Chiltern Cinema would do a free "view before you buy" sneak preview that people would travel all over Britain for...including me!
Kadoogan
says...
10:06am Thu 27 Sep 12
I still look fondly on the days of the Palace in Frogmore. I love cinemas with the traditional balcony/stalls arrangement. I will admit that since the Palace used to be referred to as the 'flea-pit' I am probably only remembering it's positive points, and have conveniently forgotten the bad!
supercraig
says...
12:30pm Thu 27 Sep 12
Plazaman wrote:ha, I *knew* my correction would lead to further confusion... I meant it was superman 3 which terrified me in the Frogmoor cinema, I'd mistyped it as superman 2 :)
KentP wrote:It would have been Superman 4. Superman 3 came out four years before Wycombe 6 opened!
gah, superman 3 even...
Darren Hayday says...
11:03am Wed 26 Sep 12
I used to regularly go to see films at "Wycombe 6", a hobby that has stayed with me to this day (ie a mad movie mogul)
However I recently went back to watch the Artist (as at the time it wasn’t showing at Cineworld) and I was dismayed at the lack of much needed refurbishment and investment needed to keep it looking smart.
I know that they now have another x2 screens but at the cost that they have crammed them in.
If you go into the toilets and see the past 25 years of dust and much that's built up over the years in the air vents - it was really quiet shocking (plus sticky floors…yuck!)
I don’t think that I would be going back there again unless it was refurbished (properly).
But still a very important part of our history and still going!