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Odeon Cinema
Cinema

Edinburgh has eight main cinema's. But during the month of August many more come on stream at various venues across the city. This is of course the time of the Edinburgh International Festival. The main ones are listed below. Thus if a night at the cinema is your thing, simply study the link below and book the seat from the comfort of your own home. You can even go to the transport page and book your taxi while you are at it.

Filmhouse
0131 228 2688
Odeon Cinema
;0871 224 4007
Dominion Cinema
0131 447 4771
Odeon Wester Hailes
0871 224 4007
 Ster Century Cinema
 0131 553 0700
Vue Cinema Ocean Terminal
 0871 224 0240
Vue Cinema York Place
 0131 557 3906
 Cineworlds
 0131 228 8788

During the first half of the twentieth century, cinema came to form a significant presence in the life of most Scots, whether they lived in the city or countryside; according to Trevor Griffiths, by 1950-1 the average person attended the pictures 36 times a year ('The Cinema and Cinema-Going in Scotland, 1896-1950'). The introduction of films or moving pictures was immediately popular, and they were shown in many places from churches to halls at the start of the twentieth century, often with travelling cinematographers bringing the films to those in remote areas.

The first moving picture was shown in Scotland on 13 April 1896, in the Empire Palace Theatre, Edinburgh; the first Scottish film ‘The Departure of the Columba from Rothesay Pier’ (1896) was screened at The Skating Palace in Glasgow the same year. By 1915, the same year William Fox founded the Fox Film Corporation in the USA, 119 purpose-built cinemas or picture houses from Elgin to Edinburgh were listed in the Valuation Rolls. In January 1914 the Cameo cinema opened in Tollcross, Edinburgh, as the King's Theatre, and appears for the first time in the Valuation Rolls in 1915. The premises were rented by the Edinburgh and District Cinematograph Theatres Ltd. from the owner, Charles Cooper.

Not only was cinema a great form of entertainment for members of the public, it was also a good source of employment, creating positions for projectionists (also known as cinematographers at the time), music directors, ushers, ticket sellers and cleaners. Women formed a significant part of the work force from cinema’s earliest days in Scotland. According to Glasgow University, at Cinema House, in Renfield Street, Glasgow, for example, women were employed there in 1911 as cleaners and musicians. During the first world war women became even more sought after, with cinemas advertising for many different roles including female managers. One area where their absence is notable, however, is as cinematographers.

Cinema was to evolve over the first two decades of the twentieth century with the unexpected end of the silent picture and the introduction of ‘the talkies’. The 1910s and 1920s witnessed experimentation in the mixing of audio and animation; orchestral music was sometimes played alongside the moving picture or an unseen actor would read a poem or other script as the movie played. As cinema houses moved quickly to show this new style of film, it brought a permanent end for many jobs. By 1931 some 8,000 professional musicians across Glasgow had become unemployed and only 2 cinemas in Edinburgh operated with orchestras playing alongside the movie, according to Glasgow University research).

Moving pictures and films were not only shown in the big cities but they spanned right across the country. Robert Calder was a man who brought cinema to those further afield. Originally employed as a ploughman, joiner and a church beadle in Aberdeenshire, he formed a touring party and first brought a 'cinematography exhibition' to Shetland in 1897. He returned twice a year with his ‘Famous Cinematograph and Pictorial Concert Party’, during which he would show films such as the funeral of Queen Victoria, the Messina earthquake and the Paris exhibition, and last visited in 1910. In 1912 he went to Fraserburgh to manage a cinema before returning to work as a joiner. He died on 28 August 1928 aged 77.