The line graph demonstrates the percentage of people in 4 different age groups who visited the cinema per month even once in one country over 30 years period.
Overall, teenagers were more likely to go to the cinemas than other age groups while elderly were not often go to the cinemas. In 1988, the number of people visiting the cinemas hit its lowest figure and reached a peak in 1998.
It can be seen that young people’s figures were very high. The number of teenagers visiting the cinemas in one month was fluctuated from 80% to over 90%while
the 25-34 age group’s number had a fluctuation from 60% to 80%. Both of these two percentages declined in the first 10 years. However, in the next 10 years young adults’s proportions was increased significantly by 20% while teenagers just grew slightly by approximately 5%.Between 1998 and 2003 the figure for teenagers and young adults remained unchanged and then they both slowly decreased, with teenagers at 85%. and young adults at over 75%
In addition, adults and elderly were not usually. watch movies at the cinemas. In the first 10 years, the amount of adults and old people visiting the cinemas per month went down remarkably by 10% each group. There was a dramatic rise in the figure of these two age groups in 1998, the 35-49 age group’s percentage grew up to 70% and the 50+ age group’s percentage increased to 50%. Instead of having a slight increase like elderly’s proportion, adults’ figures recorded a slow drop. at about 68% in 2008.
