The two diagrams represent the shares of films screened in the UK and Australia in 2001 and the development of cinema admission from 1976 to 2006 in these countries.
Overall, the first graph shows the fact that the amount of US films was dominated in the theatres in the UK and Australia. According to the second graph, the changes in cinema admission, that is given in millions, in Australia are more sustainable and considerable that in the UK.
To go into details, the first chart clearly illustrates the fact that US films were the most popular and in demand in both countries; Australian films, on the contrary, were the less screened. It can be noticed that the percentage of films made in the USA, UK, and Australia and shown on the screens in the UK has a big difference with the Australian’s one, however, films produced in other countries were screened 25% more in Australia than in the United Kingdom. The less inequality in percentages belongs to the US films and is 9.5%, the biggest one is owned by UK cinematography and is 14%. The Australian movies were shown nearly 8% more in the United Kingdom.
As the second data suggests, the number of cinema attendants was increasingly growing since 1975; however the UK’s seems to be more unstable and rough, than the Australian. In 1975, approximately 100 million people went to watch movies in the UK and 30 million in Australia. Over three decades, the amount of cinema attendants had visibly grown; in the UK the number in 2005 was about 150 million and had increased in one and a half times, the Australia number growth is far more sustainable; in 2005, cinema admission in the country was 80 million that was more than twice times bigger than in 1975.
