This panel will present the first comparative research results from the European Cinema Audiences (AHRC 2018-2021) research project based on the completed data collection for the film programming for Bari (IT), Leicester (UK), Ghent (BE), Rotterdam (NL), Gothenburg (SE), Brno (CZE) and Magdeburg (GDR). According to Biltereyst, Van Oort and Meers (2018) it is safe to argue that comparative research is only weakly developed within film and cinema studies. The European Cinema Audiences project’s employed Hantrais (1995) definition of cross-national and comparative study, where “individuals set out to examine particular issues or phenomena in two or more countries with the express intention of comparing their manifestations in different socio-cultural settings, using the same research instruments (…) to gain a greater awareness and a deeper understanding of social reality in different national contexts.” The three papers that constitute this panel will discuss issues of comparative analysis that emerged using the programming data collected for the ECA project. The papers will present the methodology developed to define a new typology of cinemas standardized across seven European cities and a cross-analysis of film programming for the years 1951 to 1953 across these categories.
Comparing historical datasets across seven different countries is a challenge not only because ‘cross-cultural differences require careful consideration’ (Fischer and Poortinga 2018: 694). From an empirical perspective, data collection’s complexity involves negotiating results based on incomplete records as well as substituting absent figures with proxy data, both common practices of any historical research of this kind. The programming and exhibition analysis of the European Cinema Audiences project has adopted a methodology that aims to carefully replace missing ticket prices for cinema admission with price proxy, in order to develop a new typology of cinemas and standardize them across Europe. Dealing with ‘multilayered data’ calls for ‘multilevel analysis’ (Andreß et al. 2019: 2) and this paper will introduce the price proxy, present how the price proxy was used in this multilevel analysis to create cinema weights, to explore top 20 films’ circulation across our seven cities, and to investigate how each cinema adopted individual strategies to attract their audiences.
Andreß, Hans-Jürgen, Fetchenhauer, Detlef, Meulemann, Heiner (2019) Cross-National Comparative Research—Analytical Strategies, Results, and Explanations, Köln Z Soziol (2019) (Suppl 1) 71:1–28
Biltereyst, D., Van Oort, T. & Meers, Ph. (2019). Comparing historical cinema cultures: reflections on new cinema history and comparison with a cross-national case study on Antwerp and Rotterdam. In D. Biltereyst, R. Matlby & P. Meers (Eds.). The Routledge Companion to New Cinema History (pp. 96-111). London/New York: Routledge. Browning, H.E. en Sorrell, A.A., Cinemas and Cinema-going in Great Britain. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, vol. 117, nr. II, 1952, pp. 133-170. Fischer, Ronald, Poortinga, Ype H. (2018)
Addressing Methodological Challenges in Culture-Comparative Research, Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, vol. 49, 5: pp. 691-712 Hantrais, L. (1995). Comparative Research Methods. Social Research Update 13.
Daniela Treveri Gennari is Professor of Cinema Studies. She is currently the Principal Investigator of the AHRC-funded project European Cinema Audiences. Entangled Histories, Shared Memories. The project is promoted on its website (www.europeancinemaaudiences.org) as well as on Facebook (European Cinema Audiences). Her publications include, among others, her monograph Post-war Italian Cinema. American Intervention, Vatican Interests (Routledge, New York, 2009), the edited volume (with Catherine O’Rawe and Danielle Hipkins) Rural Cinema Exhibition and Audiences in a Global Context (Palgrave, 2018), and the volume Italian Cinema Audiences. Histories and Memories of Cinema-going in Post-war Italy.
The objective of this paper is to present a systematic classification of the types of cinemas across Europe according to new common characteristics. Our methodology, in fact, expands on the limited criterion of seating capacity as the basis of classifying cinemas (Browning & Sorrell, 1952), by taking into account also the hierarchical position of each cinema within their respective cinema populations as well as across the European market. The ECA typology ranks cinemas in minor, intermediate, major and elite venues, according to their cinema weight, a value that takes into consideration seating capacity, price proxy and revenue potential. This presentation will illustrate the different categories and demonstrate how they apply across our dataset, providing illustrative examples and exceptions concerning screening frequencies and the process of discrimination.
Andreß, Hans-Jürgen, Fetchenhauer, Detlef, Meulemann, Heiner (2019) Cross-National Comparative Research—Analytical Strategies, Results, and Explanations, Köln Z Soziol (2019) (Suppl 1) 71:1–28
Biltereyst, D., Van Oort, T. & Meers, Ph. (2019). Comparing historical cinema cultures: reflections on new cinema history and comparison with a cross-national case study on Antwerp and Rotterdam. In D. Biltereyst, R. Matlby & P. Meers (Eds.). The Routledge Companion to New Cinema History (pp. 96-111). London/New York: Routledge. Browning, H.E. en Sorrell, A.A., Cinemas and Cinema-going in Great Britain. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, vol. 117, nr. II, 1952, pp. 133-170. Fischer, Ronald, Poortinga, Ype H. (2018)
Addressing Methodological Challenges in Culture-Comparative Research, Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, vol. 49, 5: pp. 691-712 Hantrais, L. (1995). Comparative Research Methods. Social Research Update 13.
Lies Van de Vijver is Co-Investigator and project manager of European Cinema Audiences and postdoctoral researcher at the Centre for Cinema and Media Studies, Ghent University, Belgium. Her research focuses on historical and contemporary screen culture, film programming and cinema experience, and has been published in Cultural Studies, European Journal of Cultural Studies, and The Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, and in edited collections. She edited Mapping Movie Magazines. Digitization, Periodicals and Cinema History with Daniel Biltereyst, and is currently working on a book on the history of cinema culture in Ghent.
Following on Lies Van de Vijver’s explanation and analysis of the typology of cinemas as defined in the ECA project, this paper will focus on the discussion of case studies emerging from the seven cities. The aim of the paper is twofold. On the one hand, it will look at how the distribution trajectories within a city helped us define film venue profiles and give a better understanding of the hierarchy of the film exhibition structure. And, on the other hand, it will analyse how cinemas belonging to a specific category performed within the market and operated in terms of programming within a city but also cross-nationally in the seven European cities.
Andreß, Hans-Jürgen, Fetchenhauer, Detlef, Meulemann, Heiner (2019) Cross-National Comparative Research—Analytical Strategies, Results, and Explanations, Köln Z Soziol (2019) (Suppl 1) 71:1–28
Biltereyst, D., Van Oort, T. & Meers, Ph. (2019). Comparing historical cinema cultures: reflections on new cinema history and comparison with a cross-national case study on Antwerp and Rotterdam. In D. Biltereyst, R. Matlby & P. Meers (Eds.). The Routledge Companion to New Cinema History (pp. 96-111). London/New York: Routledge. Browning, H.E. en Sorrell, A.A., Cinemas and Cinema-going in Great Britain. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, vol. 117, nr. II, 1952, pp. 133-170. Fischer, Ronald, Poortinga, Ype H. (2018)
Addressing Methodological Challenges in Culture-Comparative Research, Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, vol. 49, 5: pp. 691-712 Hantrais, L. (1995). Comparative Research Methods. Social Research Update 13.
Pierluigi Ercole is Associate Professor of Film Studies at De Montfort University (UK). He is Co-Investigator for the AHRC-funded project European Cinema Audiences. Entangled Histories, Shared Memories. His publications include the articles ‘Screening Fascism in the Free State’, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television (2014); ‘The Greatest Film of the Fascist Era’, Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media (2013) and his work is included in the edited collections Silent Italian Cinema: A Reader (2013) edited by G. Bertellini; Cinema, Audiences and Modernity: New Perspectives on European Cinema History (2011), edited by D. Biltereyst, R. Maltby and P. Meers.