Event Cinemas
Greater Union Organisation Pty Ltd, trading as Event Cinemas, Moonlight Cinema and Birch Carroll & Coyle, is the largest movie exhibitor in Australia and New Zealand, with over 140 cinema complexes currently operating worldwide.
The Greater Union Organisation is a subsidiary of EVT Limited which is listed on the Australian Securities Exchange, a corporation that owns and operates brands in the entertainment, hospitality and leisure sectors, mainly within Australasia.
History
The Event Cinemas cinema chain has had a significant impact on the Australian culture and film industry, and has a history of mergers and acquisitions and liquidations that span over a century.Early 20th century
From 1906 to 1911, during the silent era, Australia was the most prolific producer of feature films in the world, a period which included the creation of the first feature-length film The Kelly Gang. This creative and fertile period in Australian film history was largely created by competition between West's Pictures, Spencer's Pictures and Amalgamated Pictures. On 4 May 1912 the three joined to form The General Film Company of Australasia. On 4 January 1913 it then merged with The Greater J.D. Williams Amusement Co and restructured to become The Combine, a famous partnership between the exhibition wing Union Theatres and the production and distribution wing Australasian Films.The Combine monopoly was highly influential on the early twentieth-century Australian film industry. However, it came under heavy criticism for its low interest in producing Australian films, its preference for imported cinema, and its reluctance to exhibit Australian films by other producers. Film icon and director Raymond Longford, whose independent production company had come under attack by the group, said in 1927 that "had it not been for the activities of that firm in its endeavour to crush it in its infancy, the local picture would now be 10 years at least advanced to the height now attained by the Americans." Historians have traced the sharp decline of the Australian film industry in 1913 to the repercussions of these series of takeovers and mergers. James Sabine has said that "the stranglehold of The Combine forced a decline in local production and contributed to many Australian production companies closing their doors."
The Combine continued to grow into the 1920s during the genesis of the Hollywood era with its focus on exhibiting American films. The Great Depression saw Union Theatres being liquidated in 1931 and its assets purchased by newly-formed Greater Union Theatres. This new company split from Australasian Films, established the Hollywood-model subsidiary Cinesound Productions, expanded into radio and newspaper, and kept its major focus on building and managing cinemas. Due to The Depression, Greater Union Theatres merged into the General Film Corporation with Hoyts, a competitor who had secured Fox Film as a shareholder. In 1937 Norman Rydge became managing director and removed the company from the previous merger. Rydge halted feature film production during the war and never resumed it.
1945–present: post-war expansion
In 1945, the last year of World War II, there was a box office boom and the British Rank Organisation purchased a half share in Greater Union Theatres. During this time Greater Union acquired the rights of ownership of many theatres across the country including what became the Phoenician Club in Broadway, Sydney in 1943, originally owned by McIntyre's Broadway Theatres and established as a cinema in 1911. It acquired the Clifford Theatre Circuit in Adelaide in March 1947. The purchase price of £300,000 for the 22 suburban and regional cinemas was "believed to be the largest motion picture transaction ever made in Australia". The Clifford name was retained as a tribute to the entrepreneur Dan Clifford, and South Australian staff were retained.In 1958, the four holding companies in the Greater Union Theatres group were merged into the Rydge family Amalgamated Holdings Limited, and in 1965 Greater Union Theatres was renamed the Greater Union Organisation. In 1980 billionaire Alan Rydge was appointed Chairman of AHL to become the youngest chairman of an Australian public company.
In 1971, it merged its assets with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's Australian cinema unit, which the company's B.E.F. subsidiary distributing MGM titles until 1973, when distribution that studio's films in Australia was shifted to Cinema International Corporation. In 1976, the company's British Empire Films unit was initially renamed GUO Film Distributors, then six years later, it was renamed to Greater Union Film Distributors.
In 1975, Greater Union bought the old Metro Theatre in Hindley Street, Adelaide, and redeveloped it as a modern four-screen cinema complex, called Hindley Cinemas 1–4. In October 1980, the company bought the building that had once housed the first cinema in Adelaide, West's Olympia, also in Hindley Street. After a time in which rebuilds were made to the cinema, it reopened in December 1982 as Hindley Cinemas 5–6.
In 1984, AHL regained control over the now-defunct Rank Organisation's half share, meaning that it once again became fully Australian-owned. In 1987 GUO merged with Village Roadshow's film distribution unit to form the distribution company Roadshow Film Distributors, and by that time, GUO and Village Roadshow partnered on a $100 million cinema chain that will see 200 circuits expanded by use by 1990.
In 1991, GUO acquired Birch, Carroll & Coyle. In the same year, Hindley Cinemas 1–4 and 5–6 closed.
21st century
In 2003, AHL and Village Roadshow combined to form Australian Theatres.Since 2009, most cinemas in Australia have been renamed from Greater Union Cinemas or Birch Carroll & Coyle to Event Cinemas, with some Greater Union or BCC Cinemas locations across Australia closed down over the years. On 22 December 2015, AHL was renamed Event Hospitality and Entertainment.
In June 2016, Event Cinemas acquired New Zealand cinema chain Downtown Cinemas.
In 2019, Birch Carroll & Coyle was inducted into the Queensland Business Leaders Hall of Fame in recognition of being Australia's leading provincial film distributor and its industry leadership throughout Queensland for 80 years.
In September 2025, Event Cinemas announced that Greater Union Morley will be closing down with their last session screened on 14 September. The closure of Greater Union Morley marked the end of Greater Union branding as the last cinema in Australia trading under the Greater Union name.
Locations
Australia
Event Cinemas operates venues around Australia, many of which are located in large shopping centres. The cinema complexes comprise multiple screens. The below locations do not include sites that operate under the joint venture between Village Roadshow and Event Hospitality & Entertainment known as Australian Theatres.New South Wales
- Blacktown – trading as Skyline Drive-In
- Bondi Junction
- Burwood
- Campbelltown
- Castle Hill
- Coffs Harbour – trading as BCC Cinemas
- Edmondson Park
- Glendale
- Hornsby
- Hurstville
- Kotara
- Liverpool
- Macquarie
- Miranda
- Parramatta
- Shellharbour
- Sydney CBD – colloquially known as George St
- Top Ryde City
- Tuggerah
- Casuarina – trading as BCC Cinemas
- Palmerston
- Brisbane City
- Broadbeach – colloquially known as Pacific Fair
- Cairns Central
- Cairns Earlville
- Cairns Smithfield
- Capalaba – trading as BCC Cinemas
- Carindale
- Chermside
- Coomera
- Indooroopilly
- Kawana
- Loganholme
- Mackay Mount Pleasant – trading as BCC Cinemas
- Maroochydore Sunshine Plaza – trading as BCC Cinemas
- Mt Gravatt – colloquially known as Garden City
- Noosa – trading as BCC Cinemas
- North Lakes
- Robina
- Rockhampton North
- Southport – colloquially known as Australia Fair
- Springfield
- Strathpine – trading as BCC Cinemas
- Toowoomba – colloquially known as Grand Central
- Toowoomba – trading as BCC Cinemas Toowoomba Strand
- Townsville – trading as BCC Cinemas
Western Australia
With cinema admissions in decline, Event Cinemas has continued to experience growth by raising the price of admissions and offering "premium experiences" such as "Gold Class" which offers more luxury seating and food, "Vmax" which offers a larger screen, and alternate content including Bollywood films, football, gaming, film festivals, opera and stand-up comedy events.
Fiji
Within Fiji, Damodar Event Cinemas is a joint venture between Village Cinemas, and the Fijian-based Damodar Brothers, who operate the existing two-cinema chain under licence since 2010.The brand has since changed its name to "Damodar Cinemas".
- Damodar City – trading as Damodar Event Cinemas
New Zealand
- Albany, Auckland
- Blenheim
- Chartwell, Hamilton
- Coastlands, Whakatāne
- Embassy Theatre, Wellington
- Havelock North
- Manukau, Auckland
- New Plymouth
- Newmarket, Auckland
- Palmerston North
- Coastlands Shopping Centre, Paraparaumu
- Queen Street, Auckland
- Queensgate, Lower Hutt
- St Lukes, Auckland
- Tauranga Central
- Tauranga Crossing
- Westcity, Auckland
- Westgate, Auckland
- Whangārei
- Newmarket, Auckland
- Rialto Cinema, Dunedin
Experiences
Gold Class
Gold Class is a premium cinema format available at selected Event Cinemas locations in Australia, New Zealand, and Fiji. It features in-cinema service, à la carte food and beverage menus, and reclining seating in auditoriums with reduced capacity. The concept originated with Village Cinemas and was later adopted by the Event Group.All Gold Class cinemas operate as dedicated premium areas within standard Event Cinemas complexes.
Australia
- Bondi Junction
- Broadbeach
- Campbelltown
- Carindale
- Castle Hill
- Chermside
- Coomera
- Mount Gravatt
- Indooroopilly
- Innaloo
- Kawana
- Kotara
- Loganholme
- Macquarie
- Marion
- Miranda
- North Lakes
- Parramatta
- Robina
- Southport
- Springfield
- Sydney CBD
- Whitford
- Damodar Event Cinemas
- Albany
- Auckland – colloquially known as Queen St