The line graph compares four age cohorts in terms of their average cinema attendance in the United Kingdom between 2000 and 2011, with figures presented in percentages.
Overall, the proportion of cinema-goers aged 15-24 was the highest among all age groups during the given timeframe, while the involvement for people who are 35 and above was the least, with both 7-14 and 25-35 age cohorts followed the same pattern over the period. Of particular note is cinema attendance increased in all categories.
According to the data, the usual cinema participation for cohort aged 15-24 was nearly 18% in 2000 before experiencing a growth over the remaining years, reaching 30% in 2004. After that, it showed some fluctuations and rose to roughly 53%, making it dominant in cinema attendance in 2011. By comparison, the average involvement for older adults was approximately 2% at the beginning of the period, the lowest moviegoers group before staying unchanged till 2004. Then, it started to see increase gradually, reaching around 10% in 2010 and climbed to almost 13% in 2011.
In contrast, the participation for moviegoers aged 7-14 accounted for 10% initially, before fluctuating through the years, increasing to roughly 23% in 2008. Subsequently, once it has rose to its peak, 35% in 2010, it dropped to 30% in 2011, respectively. When it comes to group 25-35, it started at around 3% and remained low initially before increaing steadily in the following years, reaching nearly 18% in 2008. Then, after some fluctuations, it reached the same point as cinema-goers aged 7-14 did in the final year, with 30%, respectively.
