THE EUROPEAN CINEMA CHARTS |
Admissions in Europe in 2019 (millions) and their percentage variations with regard to 2018
ADMISSIONS (x 1,000)
Western Europe
1) Relevant to screens with more than 60 days of activity per year. 2017 - 2019: MEDIA Salles estimate on the basis of Cinetel data. Central and Eastern Europe and Mediterranean Rim 1) Excluding added content and regional films.
All the 2019 figures published in these tables should be considered provisional.
An exceptional 2019 for Europe’s cinemas: MEDIA Salles is able to publish the 2019 admissions figures for a total of 39 European territories: 1,343 million admissions, compared to 1,290 in 2018, with a 4.1% increase. The six leading markets In terms of tickets sold in 2019, first place goes to Russia which, with 217.6 million (+7.6%), overtakes Europe’s historical market leader - as happened for the first time in 2017 - i.e. France. Yet here too, a record result is recorded: 213.3 million spectators (+6.1%). This is its second best performance in the past half century, bettered only in 2011, when 217.2 million spectators were counted. Western Europe Most of Western Europe’s markets are marked by this positive trend. The Netherlands boasts an above-average growth rate (+6.5%), adding a further success to its long line of positive results and obtaining more than 38 million admissions, more than doubling the audiences of the ‘Nineties. Flattering growth rates are also recorded in Luxembourg (+8.7%), Austria (+5.9%), Switzerland (+5.6%) and Portugal (+5.1%). Growth rates substantially in line with Europe as a whole are to be observed in Belgium (+4% according to the most reliable estimates) and in Finland (+3.8%). This is the Northern European country that obtains the best result in 2019, followed by Denmark, which grows by 1.8%, remaining above the 13-million-tickets threshold. Greece records an increase of 2.3%, touching on 10 million admissions. A counter-trend is instead to be seen in Sweden, suffering from its third consecutive fall in numbers (-2.8%), Norway, which after a positive 2018 producing over 12 million spectators, sees a 6.8% drop, and Iceland, where the first figures available suggest a decrease of -12.3% compared to the decidedly positive previous year. For the second year running, audiences in Ireland decrease (-4.2%), though this is a territory that nonetheless boasts a per capita admissions rate amongst the highest in Europe (around 3 tickets a year per inhabitant). Central-Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean Rim In this part of Europe where Russia - as already mentioned - grows by 7.6%, distinctly uneven results are recorded. A decidedly high growth rate (+12.1%) is observed in the Czech Republic, where audiences grow to over 18 million, doubling the figures for the first few years of the twenty-first century. 2019 was also a highly successful year for neighbouring Slovak Republic, which once again easily passes the six-million-spectators threshold (+9.5%). Above-average increases are also recorded in Bosnia Herzegovina (+10.8%), Cyprus (+8.7%), Latvia (+7.9%), Montenegro (+7.7%), the Serb Republic (+6.9%), Croatia (+6.6%) and Georgia (+4.7%). In Bulgaria (+2.4%) and Poland (+2.0%) a more modest growth rate is to be observed. In the latter country, however, the figure represents a further rise in an uninterrupted series of improvements since 2014. In addition, in 2019 Poland recorded over 60 million spectators, doubling the results obtained in the first few years of the new century. With 3.7 million tickets, Estonia betters its 2018 result by 1.5% and manages to gain over a million new spectators over six years. Together with Russia, overall these countries obtain around 20 million new spectators, compared to the previous year. Nonetheless there remain territories where the trend is reversed and which, overall, lose over 12 million ticket sales. They include first and foremost Turkey which, after two years with over 70 million spectators, suffers a 15.7% drop, halting ticket sales at 59 million. Next in line are Slovenia (-9.4%), Malta and Hungary, markets where estimates indicate drops of respectively 5% and 3%, Lithuania, (-2.9%) and lastly Romania and Ukraine, with tweaks of respectively 1.6% and 1.1%. |