Campaigners hope to save cinema

Regal Melton is one of England's oldest independents.

by Jennie Kermode

The Regal Cinema in Melton Mowbray is an elegant building with a proud history as one of England's foremost independent cinemas. It ran for many years under the devoted care of local businessman John Merryweather but following his death in April its future has been in doubt. Now a group of local campaigners have come together to try and save it - even if they have to run it themselves.

"It's a lovely 1920s Art Deco building, recently refurbished and really nice," local resident Sue Bailey told Eye For Film. "I wrote a letter to the local paper saying it was such a shame it had to close and I said, how about we come together and try to run it as a community enterprise - we, the people of Melton Mowbray? To my surprise the paper printed my full letter and over the next week there was a huge response from the public. We were flooded with emails offering support. So I set up a Facebook group and it got 225 members in just one week. It's wonderful - it shows people really want it."

All this sounds a bit overwhelming, but fortunately Sue, who is a nurse, had prior experience of organising projects and dealing with news stories from her work in the NHS. She says she's making all this effort because she loves the Regal and has enjoyed watching films there for many years. The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel enjoyed packed screenings there just before it closed. Sue says she's particularly fond of romantic comedies but that the cinema had something for everyone and particularly appealed to families, for whom it would be impractical to travel 12 miles to the next nearest cinema in Leicester.

The plan now is to have a meeting on Thursday at which the project will be formalised. "Then people will have proper roles. We'll need a finance bod and an admin bod and somebody to do marketing. We'll work on drawing up a business plan to see if it can really be done," Sue explains. "I think people feel really strongly about film because they enjoy it so much. Multiplexes have their place but especially for small towns like this it's a dreadful shame that so many small cinemas have closed."

If you'd like to get involved, you can find out more about the project on its Facebook page, Save Regal Melton.

Share this with others on...
News

Love, not reason Pawel Pawlikowski, Sandra Hüller, August Diehl and Hanns Zischler discuss Fatherland

The monstrosity of the form Katie Aselton and Mark Duplass on relatable storytelling and Magic Hour

Going off-plan Ben Wheatley on early inspirations, developing his craft and making Normal

The accidental revolutionary Dimitri Planchon and Jean-Paul Guigue discuss artistic evolution and Blaise

Embracing complexity Nigel Santos on the messiness of real life romance, and Open Endings

Alone together Park Joon-ho on loneliness, North Korean experience, gay life and 3670

More news and features

We're bringing you news, reviews and more from Cannes and Queer East.



We've recently brought you coverage of the San Francisco Independent Film Festival, Visions du Réel, Fantaspoa, Overlook, BFI Flare and SXSW, the Thessaloniki International Documentary Festival, the NY Rendezvous with French Cinema, the Glasgow Film Festival, the Berlinale, Sundance and Palm Springs.



Read our full for more.


Visit our festivals section.

Interact

Don't forget that you can follow us on YouTube for trailers of festival films and more. You can also find us on Mastodon and Bluesky.


It's a busy time for festivals and here's the latest:


Cannes Teenage Sex And Death At Camp Miasma team takes to the stage


Cannes Paul Laverty, Demi Moore, Park Chan-Wook and others speak out


Cannes Honorary Palme d'Or for Peter Jackson


Cannes Festival to host 25th anniversary screening of The Fast And The Furious, as Classics also announced


Fantasia First wave of titles announced