Location | Edinburgh, Scotland, UK |
---|---|
Coordinates | 55°56′47.18″N3°12′22.10″W / 55.9464389°N 3.2061389°W |
Owner | Caledonian Heritable |
Operator | Filmhouse (Edinburgh) Ltd |
Current use | Temporarily closed |
Opened | 1979 |
Closed | October 2022 |
Website | |
www |
The Edinburgh Filmhouse is a cinema located in Edinburgh, Scotland, which opened in 1979. It was home to the world's oldest continually running film festival, Edinburgh International Film Festival. [1] [2] The cinema closed in October 2022 when its parent body went into administration. In September 2023, a campaign organised by former staff to reopen the cinema got underway. [3] The planned re-opening date is currently June 2025.
The building that housed the Filmhouse was erected in 1831 as United Presbyterian Church (later United Free Church), designed by the architect David Bryce in a Neoclassical villa style. It later became St. Thomas's Church of Scotland. [4] [5] [6]
The cinema began life when, in 1979, the disused St. Thomas Church building was converted into a 100-seat auditorium (later cinema 2) accessed via a side entrance on Morrison Street Lane. [7] [8] The front of the building was listed and remained inaccessible until in 1985 when a new 280 seat auditorium and bar were added and the front entrance opened. It was located on Lothian Road nearby the Usher Hall, Traverse and Lyceum Theatres.
In March 2020, it was announced that the Filmhouse had plans to build a new home for the cinema on Festival Square, next to its existing premises. This was a revival of a plan that failed to win backing in 2004. The new cinema was never built, likely due to the company’s subsequent financial troubles. [9]
Starting in 2001, Edinburgh Filmhouse hosted the Edinburgh Greek Festival. [10]
From 2010, Filmhouse was incorporated into Centre for the Moving Image (CMI), a registered charity which also incorporated the Edinburgh International Film Festival, Edinburgh Film Guild and the Belmont Filmhouse in Aberdeen.
Since its inception it hosted the Edinburgh International Film Festival annually.
The Filmhouse was a publicly funded arthouse cinema. [11] Its programme was varied, ranging from art-house and foreign cinema to mainstream and second run films seven days a week. Extensive film education, informal and formal, for audiences of all ages, also took place.
The building included a cafe and bar.
On 6 October 2022 the CMI went into administration and closed its operations including the Filmhouse while seeking buyers for its assets. [12] In April 2023, Caledonian Heritable, which owns several pubs in Edinburgh, purchased the building for £2.65 million. [13] In July, the firm announced that they were close to reaching a deal with a group of former Filmhouse staff that would allow the cinema to re-open. [14] That deal was reached and in September a fundraising campaign [15] was launched to fund extensive refurbishment of the cinemas and cafe bar before a planned reopening in summer 2024.
In January 2025, it was announced that the refurbishment of the cafe-bar and foyer space would be completed by the end of May, with the cinemas being reopened in June. [16]
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The Edinburgh International Film Festival (EIFF), established in 1947, is the world's oldest continually running film festival. EIFF presents both UK and international films, in all genres and lengths. It also presents themed retrospectives and other specialized programming strands.
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The Centre for the Moving Image (CMI) is a registered charity comprising Edinburgh International Film Festival, Edinburgh Filmhouse and, since April 2014, the Belmont Filmhouse, Aberdeen.
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