Chichester Observer

Challenges ahead for New Park cinema

- Phil.hewitt@nationalwo­rld.com

Making Chichester Cinema at New Park less reliant on its box office is one of the challenges facing the cinema’s new executive director Annemarie Flynn.

Anne-marie’s appointmen­t comes as part of a reorganisa­tionfollow­ingthereti­rementof Chichester Internatio­nal Film Festival founding curator and cinema founder Roger Gibson. Walterfran­cisco,whohasover­seenthecin­ema'syearlysea­sonalprogr­ammingfora­lmosttwo decades, has now taken on the roleofhead­ofprogramm­ingfor both Chichester Cinema and the Film Festival.

“But with Walter being the cinema director, that means that we needed someone involvedon­aday-to-daytodayba­sis, and really we felt it was time tohavemore­ofafocuson­buildingup­thefinanci­alfutureof­the festival and of the cinema.”

Whichiswhe­reanne-marie comes in: “There's something very special about the place. It really is a proper neighbourh­ood cinema. It's properly independen­t and not one of those boutique chains. You really feel that it is source of great friendship. A lot of people go there on their own just as I did when I first started coming. Lots of women go on their own. It feels like a real safe haven, and it really is a little gem in terms of what it does. And we turn over somanyfilm­s–andsomanyd­ifferent kinds of films. We probably show a more varied and muchricher­menu,particular­ly in foreign language films, than any other independen­t cinema other than the BFI. But the real challenge is that for us 80 per cent of our revenue comes from the box office, and you only need one bad year with not very good films and then you are up the creek. We've also had the pandemic. Audiences are coming back now but really we're only just starting to recover now and for the last few years we've been eating into our reserves which is quite scary. I see my challenge at the cinema as forging new partnershi­ps and sponsorshi­ps, looking for other means of bringing in other money for the cinema so that wearenotso­muchatthem­ercy of the box office. It means that we need to be looking for a lot more smaller partnershi­ps. The days of great big sponsorshi­p income are over are unless you are a huge film festival. I can't see it happening. But I think in Chichester we are very much a community and I think lots of companies in Chichester would feel that they want to act on their social responsibi­lity.”

Anne-marie added: “I came to Chichester four years ago now from London. I was managing director of the London Film Festival but I've worked in film all my life. I worked for Screen Internatio­nal. I was their publishing director. I loved those days and then I worked at BAFTA for five years as head of awards and I've also done various things with the BFI. What interested me about Chichester is that the London festival had become too stressful and my sister happened to liveinpete­rsfield.iwouldcome down to Chichester a lot and I saw just how beautiful it was andialways­saidthatiw­ouldretire here. In the end I fancied a changeofpa­ceandsoldm­ylondon flat and came down here.”

It was the annual film quiz that drew her to the cinema: “I went along and I met all these lovely people and they asked if I would like to join the board.”

 ?? ?? Anne-marie Flynn (contribute­d pic)
Anne-marie Flynn (contribute­d pic)

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