French cinemas to ban popcorn and snacks as COVID-19 restrictions tighten

Popcorn will be banned from French cinemas due to rising COVID-19 numbers.
Popcorn will be banned from French cinemas due to rising COVID-19 numbers. Copyright sentraldigital from pixabay/Canva
By Euronews
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In an effort to suppress an unprecedented surge in COVID-19 numbers, French cinemas will ban food and drinks from being sold in cinemas.

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No more munching, crunching and slurping at the movies in France – for now.

The country's increasingly fraught fight against an unprecedented surge in COVID-19 infections is putting a stop to eating and drinking at French cinemas, just as they are showing signs of recovery from the brutal economic bashing of lockdowns last year.

COVID-19 measures kicking in Monday, once France’s New Year's celebrations are out of the way, will mean an enforced rest for popcorn machines and ice creams left in cold storage. 

The ban of at least three weeks on eating and drinking also applies to theatres, sports venues and public transport.

Another hurdle for French cinemas

Warner Bros. Pictures via AP
Fans who have waited 18 years to see Keanu Reeves in a follow-up to the Matrix franchise may be left disappointedWarner Bros. Pictures via AP

For cinema owners hoping to lure back movie fans who switched to home-viewing during the pandemic, not being able to tempt them with candies and soft drinks is another blow.

French cinemas sold 96 million tickets in the eight months they have been reopened this year, a jump of 47 per cent compared to 2020. 

But ticket sales are still down 55 per cent compared to 2019, before the pandemic, the National Centre for Film and Moving Images said Thursday in its look at French cinemas' annual sales.

It's like being told to apply the emergency brake to the high-speed train.”
Vincent Meyer, a director at Benoit

Benoit Ciné Distribution, which supplies 70 per cent of France's cinemas with popcorn, sweet treats and drinks, was deluged with both order postponements and delivery requests from movie houses expecting good sales on the final weekend before the food and drink ban.

'Spider-Man: No Way Home' and 'The Matrix Resurrections' were expected to be huge draws.

“It's like being told to apply the emergency brake to the high-speed train,” said Vincent Meyer, a director at Benoit.

What other COVID-19 restrictions are being implemented in France?

AP Photo/Bob Edme
People wearing face mask walk on the street in Saint Jean de Luz, southwestern France, Thursday, Dec.30, 2021.AP Photo/Bob Edme

Against raging COVID-19 infections, the government is hoping its latest measures will also apply a brake on the fast-spreading omicron variant – without derailing France's economic recovery that is a vote-getter for President Emmanuel Macron, facing reelection in April.

As well as the food and drink ban, there'll once again also be limits on crowd numbers at public venues, with no more than 2,000 allowed indoors and 5,000 outdoors. 

The limits don't apply to election campaign rallies, infuriating some musicians who will no longer be allowed to perform for stand-up crowds

Some suggested, only half-jokingly, that may rebrand their concerts as political rallies.

France's COVID-19 death toll is already at more than 123,000 people. New infections are higher than they have ever been and hospitals are again overburdened with the gravely sick. 

Many national health experts had called for stricter measures than those announced by the government this week, with some pushing for renewed closures of schools and businesses.

Potential benefits of the new ban

Michel Enten, manager of the Le Fontenelle cinema in the town of Marly-le-Roi west of Paris, was relieved to stay open, even if he'll no longer be able to sell cotton candy, popcorn, ices and drinks. 

He says Le Fontenelle lost about half of his clientele during the pandemic, but expects this new ban on food and drinks to hit larger cinemas particularly hard.

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Could this mean moviegoers are more likely to seek comfort in smaller, arty cinemas like his?

“There are lots of people who hate hearing the sounds of popcorn in the auditoriums," he explains.

“Perhaps we will win over new movie fans, people who were watching Netflix and are saying to themselves, ‘Now there’s no more popcorn, let’s run to the cinema.’"

France's film fans said they understood the need for new measures, although some struggled to see any logic in not being able to indulge their sweet cravings in cinemas or theatres when restaurants are still allowed to serve food and drinks.

“It’s going to be strange to just go to the cinema and do without all these little moments,” Vincent Bourdais said as he lined up in Marly-le-Roi to see the latest Spiderman.

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“Often, when one imagines the cinema, one thinks of the auditorium, the beautiful posters, the popcorn, the smells.”

Additional sources • AP

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