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While a small number of large budget films are
responsible for the majority of UK production value,
most domestic films produced in the UK are low
and
micro-budget features. Of the 200 UK domestic
features made in 2011, 62% were produced with budgets of less than £500,000. Our research shows that in recent years less than 14% of UK films at this budget level secured a theatrical release within two years of principal photography but of the remainder, 58% do get shown on other platforms.
Opening our eyes, the 2011 BFI study on the cultural
contribution of film in the UK, demonstrated the
potency of film culture in the UK and the power
of
film to act as a window on the world. The survey
showed that film occupies a high position in people’s leisure time and interests (84% of people said they were interested in film). Furthermore, 74%
said that films can be a good way of making
people think about difficult or sensitive issues and two thirds of people had seen films they found educational or which gave them insight into other cultures. When asked about significant films, many mainstream popular films were identified as having had profound effects on people. The survey also illustrated the importance of film as a versatile medium for exploring a range of subjects in formal and informal education settings, and once again this
Yearbook provides a comprehensive overview
of film education statistics.
This is the tenth edition of the Statistical Yearbook, and the RSU has now built up a decade’s worth of trend analysis for most areas of the industry. In that time, there have been major shifts in the production and consumption of feature films in the UK, with each sector of the industry having to respond to the transition from analogue to digital. The scale of the transformation within the industry becomes clear when we compare a few key metrics from 2002 with
the 2011 data.
In 2002, 369 films were released in UK cinemas, compared to 558 in 2011 (a 51% increase). Admissions in 2002 were at a 30-year high of 176
million generating
a box office gross of £755 million (while admissions
remained on a plateau for a decade the total gross box
office for 2011 exceeded £1 billion). The top UK film as
reported in that first Statistical Yearbook was Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets while Gosford Park and
Bend it Like Beckham lifted UK independent share to 6.5% (half the total recorded last year). As in 2011, the UK’s favourite genre was comedy (27% of box office from 23% releases) but UK
audiences were less likely
to visit cinemas on a weekday – 68% of the gross box
office in 2002 was generated on a weekend compared with 58% in 2011. The share of films from Europe, India and the rest of
the world amounted to just 2% of the
gross box office (3.7% in 2011) and foreign language films made up 36% of releases but only 2% of the box
office (in 2011, there were fewer foreign language
films as a share of releases and the box office share
remained the same). While some things
have changed little in 10 years, the infrastructure
and delivery platforms have altered radically.
In 2002, there were 3,258 cinema screens in the UK
but only four of those screens were digital (out
of 113 in the world). In home entertainment, DVD
players were in a quarter of UK households and a
significant number of VHS tapes were still being
sold. On demand services were limited to near Video
on Demand pay-per-view offers on satellite
and cable. Multi-channel television accounted for 22% of the UK television audience and 59% of the population owned a mobile phone.
So what of the future? With broadband speeds
increasing, smartphone and tablet ownership
on
the rise and internet-enabled television sets
becoming more commonplace the period of digital transition is by no means complete. The ways in which we choose and watch films has undergone an
enormous change in the last decade and the
next one is likely to be no different.
For the BFI, the challenge will be to accurately measure those shifts and to ensure the vast amounts of data generated in the new digital world are accessible and analysed in a robust and effective way
and made available for the benefit of all
film stakeholders.
We hope you find this Yearbook a useful source of
information and we welcome your feedback
(
[email protected]).
Sean Perkins
Head of Research and Statistics Unit
Nick Maine
Research Manager
2011 – the year in review – 7
2010 UK film trade surplus
£1.5bn