Given is line graph illustrating the tendency in number of people who visited the cinema commencing 2000 to 2016 in the UK, grouped by four different age groups.
A glance at the information supplied that cinema attracted a rising percentage of the audience regardless of ages, and the gap between these age groups had widened significantly until the end of this period.
It is explicitly observed that people between the ages of 15 to 24 had by far the highest attendance rate, starting from approximately 17% in 2000. However, the figure more than tripled, reaching the apex at roughly 60% in 2015 and followed by a slight dip to about a half in 2016, even though there were a gradual increase for the first five years and wild fluctuations thereafter. Likewise, the percentage of young people from 7 to 14 also skyrocketed from 10% to 30%, with slight oscillations before 2007 but a moderate increase after that.
Regarding the groups of people from 25 to 35 and those above 35, they were more likely not to go to the movies in 2000, at around less than 3 %. Conversely, while the proportion of the former soared dramatically to over 30%, that of the latter experienced a stable climb, arriving at 12% in 2016.
