The last ABC Cinema in Britain closed in Bournemouth in early 2017, showing Back to the Future on a public vote. The building had been designed in 1937 by William Glen, the chain's regular architect, and the sign over the entrance had survived a corporate buyout by Odeon in 2000 only because the two cinemas faced each other across Westover Road and management worried about the confusion of two identical names on the same stretch. Eighty years on the same site, and the end was a film about a teenager going home to 1955.
ABC had peaked at more than four hundred cinemas. That number is hard to picture now. It meant that a Lancashire mill town the size of Burnley had two of them on the same parade, and a market town of twenty thousand people had at least one, and a seaside resort had three or four operating in parallel through the summer. The chain was a circulatory system; the films were the blood. By 1984 UK cinema admissions had collapsed from a wartime peak of 1.64 billion to 54 million, a number that looks like a misprint. Television took most of it. The package holiday took the summer. The first purpose-built multiplex opened in Milton Keynes in 1985 and finished what was left.
What disappeared with the chain was a particular institution that had no real name in English. The seaside Odeon or ABC, the kind on the esplanade at Bournemouth or Great Yarmouth or Blackpool, did not function in summer the way it did in winter. The 2,000-seat auditoriums switched from films to live variety for three months a year, with stars like the ones the working men's clubs were also booking, just on a bigger stage. The big-house variety circuit intersected the cinema circuit inside the same buildings, and the same families went to both. When cheap flights to Spain emptied the resorts, it was the cinema-as- variety-theatre that died first, and the cinema-as-cinema that followed it down a few years later.
The texture is hard to reconstruct from photographs. The smell of a British cinema in 1978 was the smell of upholstery that had absorbed forty years of tobacco smoke, mixed with the orange chemistry of Kia-Ora and the popcorn-substitute that British exhibitors used because real corn was American. There was an intermission, with a trolley pushed up the aisle. The Rank Organisation gong played before the feature, a thing that has now been turned into a YouTube nostalgia clip with comments from people younger than the clip itself. The projector was visible from your seat through the haze above the smoking section, throwing a cone of light across the ceiling that looked solid where the dust hit it. The film flickered. You could see it flicker.
Streaming does not replace this, not because the picture is worse, but because the structural conditions are wrong. The seaside cinema was an institution of bounded time. You bought a ticket for a screening that started when it started and ended when it ended, and there was nothing you could do about either. The intermission was not a pause button; it was a fact about how reels worked. You were in a room with several hundred strangers who had also paid, and the social etiquette of that room — coats off, cigarettes lit where permitted, no commentary — was negotiated over decades and is gone with the chain that hosted it. A film on a laptop is something else entirely, and it doesn't have to apologise for that, but it isn't the same kind of object.
The buildings are still there in places. Some have become churches, some are bingo halls, some are flats, and a small number have been reopened as community cinemas by people who remember the originals. The Odeon in St Albans reopened as the Odyssey in 2014, overseen by the entrepreneur James Hannaway after the chain had walked away. Six "Oscar Deutsch" Odeons from the founder's original 1930s build-out are still trading as Odeons, including Leicester Square. The hauntology of all of this is not that the cinemas closed. It's that they were replaced by something that performs the same function and delivers a structurally different experience, and a generation grew up never knowing what the previous one had been, except as a smell they vaguely associate with their grandparents' coats.
Sources:
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ABC Cinemas — Wikipedia
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Final curtain to fall on British movie institution as last ABC Cinema closes — The Mirror
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Odeon Cinemas — Wikipedia
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Why is the UK still knocking down historic cinemas? — BBC News
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Variety on Sea: celebrating the Golden Age of the UK's Seaside Summer shows — Unrestricted Theatre