Unlimited Options: How UGC Brings a Wider Variety of Movies to their Screens

Ideally situated on the Avenue Champs-Élysées in Paris, just west of the iconic Arc de Triomphe, sits the business offices for UGC, one of France’s leading exhibition and distribution companies. The view from the top floor, suffice to say, is remarkable. It also symbolizes a philosophy now inherent within the company. A glance from one office window reveals a mesmerizing panorama spanning from the Eiffel Tower to the aforementioned arch at Place de l’Étoile. It’s old Paris in its imposing majesty. The view from the opposite office window faces toward La Défense, a modern business district full of glass high-rises and steel skyscrapers. It’s new Paris in its shimmering glory. This visual dichotomy epitomizes UGC’s focus on maintaining tradition while also looking toward the future. And that variety manifests itself at the multiplex.

It only takes a casual glance at the show times in Paris to notice the array of options available for moviegoers in the French capital. With 206 million tickets sold in 2015, France is the largest moviegoing market in Europe in terms of admissions and a close second to the U.K. in terms of box office. What makes this moviegoing figure intriguing is that it is nearly 80 percent higher than it was 25 years ago, when France bottomed out by hitting a historically low level of admissions. The market’s rebound has been achieved, in part, by collaboration among the film industry’s segments in establishing admissions-driving policies. Another such example occurred this May, when trade bodies representing production, distribution, and exhibition signed an agreement with production and distribution companies to help strengthen the market by putting in place best practices to support wider diversity in programming.

For Alain Sussfeld, co-CEO of UGC, the right mix to optimize moviegoing in France should ideally be 50 percent of the box office coming from U.S. movies, 40 percent from French movies, and the remaining 10 percent from other European and non-European productions. “This is hard to create,” Sussfeld said in an interview with Boxoffice Media CEO Julien Marcel. “Even harder to maintain, but this is essential to offer the type of quality and diversity our audience expects.”

According to Sussfeld, one should not consider diversity to be a threat to the success of Hollywood or domestic blockbusters. All movies benefit from a good market. Rather than representing conflicting interests, Sussfeld calls it an “addition of interests.”

“The goal of movie theaters should be to make sure that, at any point in time, all types of audiences can be offered a movie that matches their interests, tastes, or simply their mood of the day. Let’s not be obsessed with blockbusters targeting the teenagers. Let’s focus on the complete range of moviegoers from 5 to 75.”

The agreement signed in May between the industry’s trade bodies suggests that UGC’s philosophy on diversity is shared by others in the industry. The two principal dimensions to the agreement that affect exhibition aim to optimize screen counts and show times for all films on the market. Firstly, all stakeholders agreed to limit the number of screens dedicated to any given film on any given day. The underlying idea is that it is not good to overexpose a movie in a short period of time. “Cinema cannot be summarized as ‘Take the money and run,’” said Sussfeld. “A movie needs time in theater; it is part of its value. Putting a blockbuster in too many screens and then getting rid of it two weeks later is not good for anyone.” Additionally, exhibitors take a commitment to offer a predefined number of show times for limited-release movies that would otherwise have a hard time making it to the big screen. The strategy seeks to limit the overexposure of blockbusters and applies equally to French and U.S. movies.

Behind this approach is the idea that a solid theatrical market requires a long-term strategy that includes diversity of content rather than the maximization of box office week after week. According to Sussfeld, there is no successful diversity strategy without a consistent commercial policy. In UGC’s case, this policy is based on a strong loyalty program and an unlimited subscription pass that aims to help viewers discover new films. UGC’s unlimited pass is particularly designed to reinforce the likelihood that moviegoers will try different types of movies and adopt an attitude of discovery in future cinema visits. As a result, UGC is able to retain its fair share of blockbuster admissions while over-performing on limited-release movies, helping them balance low-attendance periods.

Sussfeld says his main concern is that this model hasn’t yet been adopted outside France, making it fragile by definition. With the support of other markets, Sussfeld believes there would be a better understanding of the specificities of moviegoing in each market. Leave it to the French to teach us a thing or two about maintaining a cultural commodity.

Ultimately, however, the model’s long-term sustainability cannot exist without a solid slate of releases. Year-to-date admissions in France, up 4.1 percent at the end of August, suggest the market hasn’t encountered any difficulty adopting this new model. The question for the near future now becomes, will any other markets venture to attempt something similar?

 

 

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