The line chart compares the differences in the proportion of four age groups going to the cinema monthly between 1984 and 2004.
Overall, the four groups underwent a rise throughout the years. While the youngsters during 15-24 experienced the highest share in a 20-year period, the maturer seemed not to have much interest in visiting the cinema.
Regarding the opposite categories, the teenagers group visiting the cinema from 15-24 started at just lower than 20%, before surging to nearly 33.2% in 1994 and fluctuating around 40-50% afterward. Subsequently, it reached a peak at almost 60%, before sawing a slight downward by the end. However, the maturest cinema customers around 35 & over exhibited a steady climb but to a lesser extent from 10.5% to 33.5% in a 15-year period, after which it soared by only 1% in the last five years and remained the lowest group of customers.
Concerning the other age groups, 10% was the percentage of the 7-14 age group catching a film each month in the beginning, it then varied around 15% in the next fifteen years, prior to peaking at roughly 37% and falling by 7% in 2004. Furthermore, only 8.7% recorded as the proportion of cinema visitors aged 25-34 every month in 1984, in the year that followed it witnessed a gradual growth until plunging to slightly under 20%. However, as the category documented another up and down, it finally ended at approximately 13.6% in 2004.
