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Industry Film Report (IFR)

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  • 8/3/2019 Industry Film Report (IFR)

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    theatrical marketstatistics

    2010

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    2

    Box office

    AttendancePg. 3-6

    Spotlight: Attendance Demographics Pg. 7-11

    Entertainment Comparisons Pg. 12

    Films Pg. 13-14

    Screens Pg. 15-16

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    Worldwide box office for all films released in each country around the world1 reached $31.8 billion in

    2010, up 8% over 2009s total, boosted by box office increases in markets outside the U.S./Canada.

    International box office ($21.2 billion) made up 67% of the worldwide total, a slightly higher

    proportion than in previous years. International box office in U.S. dollars is up significantly over five

    years ago.

    Worldwide Box Office

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    % Change

    10 vs. 09

    % Change

    10 vs. 06

    U.S./Canada2 $9.2 $9.6 $9.6 $10.6 $10.6 -- 15%

    International3 $16.3 $16.6 $18.1 $18.8 $21.2 13% 30%

    Total $25.5 $26.3 $27.8 $29.4 $31.8 8% 25%

    Worldwide Box Office (US$ Billions)

    3

    1 Values in the report include all films released, regardless of distributor or origin, except where specified as a subset.2 Source: Rentrak Corporation Box Office Essentials. Includes box office generated during the calendar year from January 1-

    December 31, 2010.3 MPAA calculates international box office country-by-country based on a variety of data sources, including Rentrak

    Corporation, local sources, Screen Digest, and others. 2009 international box office was revised due to a change by a source.

    9.2 9.6 9.610.6 10.6

    16.3 16.618.1

    18.821.2

    $0

    $5

    $10

    $15

    $20

    $25

    $30

    $35

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    International U.S./Canada

    $25.5

    $27.7$26.3

    $31.8

    $29.4

    (63%)(65%)

    (64%)

    (67%)(64%)

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    Box office for all films released in countries outside the U.S. and Canada increased 13% in 2010. As a

    result of significant growth in Asia Pacific (21%), in 2010 for the first time Europe, Middle East & Africa

    (EMEA) represented less than half (49%) of total international box office value. All major markets in

    Asia Pacific grew in 2010 in U.S. dollar terms, but the largest increase in overall box office value for all

    films, more than 40% of the Asia Pacific box office growth, occurred in China. However, Chinaremains a highly restrictive market for foreign film distribution.

    Intl Box Office By Region

    International Box Office by Region (US$ Billions)

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    % Change

    10 vs. 09

    % Change

    10 vs. 06

    EMEA $8.6 $8.7 $9.7 $9.9 $10.4 5% 21%

    Asia Pacific4 $6.5 $6.5 $6.8 $7.2 $8.7 21% 35%

    Latin America $1.3 $1.4 $1.6 $1.7 $2.1 25% 66%

    Total $16.3 $16.6 $18.1 $18.8 $21.2 13% 30%

    44 2009 Asia Pacific box office was revised due to a change by a source.

    $8.6 $8.7

    $9.7 $9.9$10.4

    6.5 6.56.8

    7.2

    8.7

    1.3 1.41.6 1.7

    2.1

    $0

    $2

    $4

    $6

    $8

    $10

    $12

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    EMEA Asia Pacific Latin America

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    Spotlight: U.S./Canada 3D Box Office (US$ Billions) and 3D Film Releases 5

    $-

    $2

    $4

    $6

    $8

    $10

    $12

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    3D box office 2D box office

    1% 2% 11%21%

    $9.2$9.6 $9.6

    $10.6 $10.6

    1%

    U.S./Canada box office repeated its peak 2009 performance in 2010, reaching $10.6 billion, up 15%

    over five years ago. 3D was a key driver 21% of 2010 U.S./Canada box office ($2.2 billion) came

    from 3D showings, nearly double the 2009 total. 25 films released with 3D versions in 2010, up from

    20 in 2009.

    U.S./Canada Box Office

    U.S./Canada Box Office (US$ Billions)Source: Rentrak Corporation Box Office Essentials

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    U.S./Canada Box Office $8.1 $9.1 $9.2 $9.3 $8.8 $9.2 $9.6 $9.6 $10.6 $10.6

    % Change vs. Prior Year 8% 12% 1% 2% -5% 4% 5% 0% 10% 0%

    % Change vs. 2010 30% 16% 16% 14% 20% 15% 10% 10% 0% --

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    % Change

    10 vs. 09

    % Change

    10 vs. 05

    3D box office $0.1 $0.1 $0.2 $1.1 $2.2 91% 2221%

    2D box office $9.1 $9.5 $9.4 $9.5 $8.4 -11% -7%

    Total box office6 $9.2 $9.6 $9.6 $10.6 $10.6 0% 15%

    5

    $8.1

    $9.1 $9.2 $9.3 $8.8$9.2

    $9.6 $9.6

    $10.6 $10.6

    $0

    $2

    $4

    $6

    $8

    $10

    $12

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    5 MPAA calculates 3D box office and release numbers based on data from MPAA member studios and from IHS Screen Digest.

    Includes only box office earned from 3D showings, not total box office for films with a 3D release.6 Source: Rentrak Corporation Box Office Essentials

    86

    8

    20

    25

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    Digital 3D film releases

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    U.S./Canada movie admissions, or tickets sold, declined 5% to 1.3 billion in 2010, equivalent to the

    2008 level. The national average of tickets sold per person (admissions per capita) decreased to 4.1 in

    2010.

    U.S./Canada Admissions

    U.S. & Canada Admissions (Billions)7

    U.S./Canada Admissions per Capita (Tickets Sold Per Person Aged 2+)8

    6

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 20

    U.S./Canada Admissions (Blns) 1.43 1.57 1.52 1.50 1.38 1.40 1.40 1.34 1.42 1

    % Change vs. Prior Year 3% 9% -3% -2% -8% 2% 0% -4% 6% -

    % Change vs. 2010 -1% -10% -7% -6% 3% 1% 1% 6% -5%

    1.43

    1.571.52 1.50

    1.38 1.40 1.40 1.341.42

    1.34

    0.00

    0.20

    0.40

    0.60

    0.80

    1.00

    1.20

    1.40

    1.60

    1.80

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    4.85.2

    4.9 4.84.4 4.4 4.4

    4.24.3

    4.1

    0.0

    1.0

    2.0

    3.0

    4.0

    5.0

    6.0

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    7Admissions calculated using Rentrak Corporation Box Office Essentials calendar year data, and National Association of

    Theater Owners (NATO) average annual ticket price (see page 12).8Admissions per capita calculated using U.S. Census Bureau and Statistics Canada data for population aged 2+.

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    32%

    2%

    10%

    47%

    47%

    51%

    11%

    0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

    Tickets sold

    Population

    Non-moviegoers Infrequent moviegoers Occasional moviegoers Frequent moviegoers

    Spotlight: Attendance Demographics

    2010 Demographic Summary9

    U.S./Canada Moviegoer Proportion of Population and Tickets Sold

    7

    Over two-thirds of the population (68%) or 222.7 million people went to the movies at least once

    in 2010. The number of moviegoers was up about 3% compared to 2009 (217.1 million), a higher

    increase than population growth (1%). Although the amount of moviegoers increased in 2010, the

    average amount of times a year that moviegoers attended the movies declined to 6.0 in 2010, from

    6.5 in 2009.

    9 MPAAs demographic attendance analysis is based on survey research (sample size=4,253) and attendance projections by

    Infogroup/Opinion Research Corporation. Beginning in 2009, several changes were made to the survey research, including

    covering calendar year, rather than summer-to-summer, and all age groups of movie ticket age (2+), rather than 12+ only.

    Therefore, data prior to 2009 is not comparable. Note that all demographics are based on U.S. surveying only.

    U.S./Canada population

    ages 2+

    U.S./Canada

    Moviegoers

    222.7 million

    Annual Tickets

    per Moviegoer

    6.0

    U.S./Canada

    movie admissions

    68%

    Frequency definitions:

    Frequent=

    Once a month or m

    Occasional=

    Less than once a m

    Infrequent=

    Once in 12 month

    Frequent moviegoers increased to 11% of the population in 2010 or 35 million people (up from 32

    million in 2009). This relatively small group is the locomotive of the industry, now responsible for

    more than 50% of ticket sales. While the number of frequent moviegoers grew, some frequent

    moviegoers and occasional moviegoers (154 million people a much larger group of people), went to

    the movies less frequently.

    Moviegoers

    68%

    Non-

    moviegoers

    32% 1.3 billion

    Admissions:

    2010 tickets sold

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    Spotlight: Frequent Moviegoers

    8

    The frequent moviegoer sub-category (35 million people) in 2010 added men of nearly all age groups,

    and women aged 18-39. The only decline in the number of frequent moviegoers occurred among 40-

    49 year-olds the amount of women in the frequent category in that age group dropped by nearly a

    million in 2010. In total, female frequent moviegoers purchased fewer tickets in 2010, while male

    frequent moviegoers purchased more.

    U.S./Canada Frequent Moviegoers by Age and Gender

    2-11 12-17 18-24 25-39 40-49 50-59 60+

    % of Population 14% 8% 10% 21% 15% 14% 18%

    % of Frequent Moviegoers 9% 18% 21% 22% 10% 8% 12%

    No. of Frequent moviegoers (m) 2010 3.1 6.3 7.5 7.9 3.6 3.0 4.4

    No. of Frequent moviegoers (m) 2009 2.8 5.7 6.3 6.3 4.5 2.9 3.4

    U.S./Canada Frequent Moviegoers (millions) by Ethnicity and Gender

    African Americans Caucasians Hispanics Others

    % of Population 12% 66% 16% 6%

    % of Frequent Moviegoers 9% 54% 29% 8%

    No. of Frequent Moviegoers (m) 2010 3.4 19.3 10.3 2.7

    No. of Frequent Moviegoers (m) 2009 2.8 19.5 6.6 3.3

    The male/female split of moviegoers is nearly even for most ethnicities, with the exception of

    Hispanics. In 2010, the amount of Hispanic males reported as frequent moviegoers increasedsignificantly.10

    10 Based on a small sample size.

    1.6

    9.5

    6.3

    1.31.8

    9.8

    4.0

    1.4

    0.0

    2.0

    4.0

    6.0

    8.0

    10.0

    12.0

    African

    Americans

    Caucasians Hispanics Others

    Males

    Females

    2.1

    3.3 3.3

    4.1

    2.2

    1.4

    2.1

    1.0

    2.9

    4.23.8

    1.4 1.6

    2.3

    0.0

    1.0

    2.0

    3.0

    4.0

    5.0

    2-11 12-17 18-24 25-39 40-49 50-59 60+

    Males

    Females

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    Spotlight: Attendance Demographics

    9

    In 2010 women purchased a lower proportion of the movie tickets (down from 55% of movie tickets

    in 2009), driven particularly by decreased attendance among women who attend frequently. In 2010,

    the only gender group that purchased more tickets than 2009 was male frequent moviegoers.

    U.S./Canada Gender Proportion of Total Population, Moviegoers and Tickets Sold

    U.S./Canada Age Group Proportion of Total Population, Moviegoers and Tickets Sold

    U.S./Canada Ethnicity Proportion of Total Population, Moviegoers and Tickets Sold

    2010 Moviegoers: 222.7 million | 2010 Total Admissions 1.3 billion

    Young people 12-24 still represent nearly one-quarter of moviegoers, and nearly one-third of tickets

    sold; however, in 2010 fewer tickets were sold to 18-24 year olds. The next age group 25-39

    increased its attendance (up to 25% of tickets sold, compared to 20% in 2009).

    Although Caucasians make up the majority of the population and moviegoers (141 million), they

    represent a lower proportion of ticket sales, down to 56% of tickets in 2010, compared to 60% in

    2009. Hispanics are more likely to go to movies. In 2010, 43 million Hispanic moviegoers purchased

    351 million movie tickets, up from 37 million moviegoers and 300 million tickets in 2009.

    50%

    51%

    51%

    50%

    49%

    49%

    0% 25% 50% 75% 100%

    Tickets sold

    Moviegoers

    Population

    Female Male

    11%

    15%

    14%

    15%

    11%

    8%

    17%

    12%

    10%

    25%

    23%

    21%

    11%

    15%

    15%

    10%

    12%

    14%

    11%

    12%

    18%

    0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

    Tickets sold

    Moviegoers

    Population

    2-11 12-17 18-24 25-39 40-49 50-59 60+

    56%

    63%

    66%

    26%

    19%

    16%

    11%

    12%

    12%

    7%

    6%

    6%

    0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

    Tickets sold

    Moviegoers

    Population

    Caucasian Hispanic African-American Other

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    Spotlight: Attendance Demographics

    10

    In 2010, womens overall per capita movie attendance dropped from 4.7 tickets per year to 4.0, while

    mens attendance per capita increased slightly, to 4.2.

    U.S./Canada Annual Attendance Per Capita Averages by Gender

    U.S./Canada Annual Per Capita Attendance Averages by Age

    U.S./Canada Annual Per Capita Attendance Averages by Ethnicity

    Young people from 18-24 went most frequently to the movies in 2009, but in 2010 their attendance

    declined to 7 tickets per person, from more than 8 tickets per person in 2009, below 12-17 year olds.

    The decline was in both genders. As noted earlier, among the various age groups, 25-39 year-olds

    showed the only increase in per capita moviegoing in 2010, driven by increased attendance by men.

    Hispanics have the highest moviegoing per capita, attending the movies on average 7 times per year,

    compared to closer to 4 times a year for other ethnicities.

    2010 Moviegoers: 222.7 million | 2010 Total Admissions 1.3 billion

    4.0 4.24.7 4.0

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    Female Male

    2010

    2009

    6.8

    4.23.5 3.7

    6.05.5

    4.0 4.0

    0.0

    2.0

    4.0

    6.0

    8.0

    Hispanic Other Caucasian African American

    2010

    2009

    3.4

    7.67.0

    5.0

    3.0 2.92.4

    4.1

    7.98.4

    4.3 3.93.0

    2.4

    0.0

    2.0

    4.0

    6.0

    8.0

    10.0

    2-11 12-17 18-24 25-39 40-49 50-59 60+

    2010

    2009

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    Spotlight: 3D Attendance

    U.S./Canada Percent of Moviegoers and Population Viewing 3D

    By Age

    11

    In 2010, more than one in three people in U.S./Canada viewed at least one movie in 3D. Looking

    specifically at U.S/Canada moviegoers only (222.7 million), more than half (52%) viewed at least one

    movie in 3D. As with general moviegoing, 3D viewing is highly correlated to age; more than 50% of

    all young people ages 2-17 saw a 3D movie in 2010, compared to 36% of the overall population. On

    average, people under 40 viewed more than one 3D movie in 2010, while those over 40 averagedfewer than one.

    0%

    10%

    20%

    30%

    40%

    50%

    60%

    70%

    80%

    90%

    100%

    2-11 12-17 18-24 25-39 40-49 50-59 60+

    Percent of population who viewed a movie in 2010

    Percent of population who viewed a 3D movie in 2010

    % of

    moviegoers

    who

    viewed a

    3D movie

    % of

    overall

    population

    who

    viewed a

    3D movie

    Adults (18+) 48% 31%

    Children (2-17) 64% 53%

    All 52% 36%

    U.S./Canada Average Number of 3D Movies Viewed in Year

    By Age

    1.3

    1.61.5

    1.2

    0.9

    0.7

    0.6

    0.0

    0.2

    0.4

    0.6

    0.8

    1.0

    1.2

    1.4

    1.6

    1.8

    2-11 12-17 18-24 25-39 40-49 50-59 60+

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    MLB,

    73.1

    NBA,

    21.1

    NHL,

    20.9

    NFL, 17.0

    The average cinema ticket price increased by 39 cents in 2010, consistent with the past few years,

    even as attendance to premium screening has increased (e.g. 3D). Movie going remains the most

    affordable entertainment option costing under $50 dollars for a family of four.

    Entertainment Comparisons

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    Average Ticket Prices $5.66 $5.81 $6.03 $6.21 $6.41 $6.55 $6.88 $7.18 $7.50 $7.89

    % Change vs. Previous Year 5% 3% 4% 3% 3% 2% 5% 4% 4% 5%

    --CPI % Change vs. Previous Year 3% 2% 2% 3% 3% 3% 3% 4% 0% 2%

    % Change vs. 2010 33% 29% 24% 21% 17% 15% 9% 4% 5% n/a

    2010 Attendance11 (US$ Millions)

    Average Annual Cinema Ticket Price (US$)Sources: National Association of Theater Owners (NATO), Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)

    12

    Movie theaters in U.S./Canada continue to draw more people than all theme parks and major U.S.

    sports combined.

    Average Ticket Price for a Family of Four (US$)11

    Sources: NATO, Sports Leagues, International Theme Park Services

    11 NBA and NHL data is for the last complete season. Theme park data is the last available full year (2009).

    1,341

    339

    132

    0

    200

    400

    600

    800

    1,000

    1,200

    1,400

    1,600

    Cinemas Theme Parks Sports

    $0 $50 $100 $150 $200 $250 $300 $350

    NFL

    Destination Theme Parks

    NHL

    NBA

    Regional Theme Parks

    MLB

    Cinemas

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    Detail: Films ReleasedSources: Rentrak Corporation, MPAA

    In 2010, the number of films rated by the Classification and Ratings Administration (CARA) was down

    11% compared to 2009. The number of films released in theaters in U.S./Canada was up slightly in

    2010, but down 12% from the historic high (634) in 2008.

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 10 vs.09 10

    Films released13 454 475 455 489 507 594 609 634 555 560 1% 2

    - 3D film releases 0 0 2 2 6 8 6 8 20 25 25%

    MPAA member total 184 205 180 180 199 204 189 168 158 141 -11% -2

    - MPAA studios 108 123 102 100 113 124 107 108 111 104 -6% -

    - MPAA studio

    subsidiaries 76 82 78 80 86 80 82 60 47 37 -21% -5

    Non-members 270 270 275 309 308 390 420 466 397 419 5% 5

    13

    Films Rated by CARA and Films Released in Domestic TheatersSources: CARA, Rentrak Corporation

    12 Note that films may be rated or re-rated months or even years after production. Includes non-theatrical films.13 Source: Rentrak Corporation Box Office Essentials. Includes all titles that opened in 2010 that earned any domestic box

    office in the year. Historical data was updated by source.

    Non-MPAA-affiliated independents continue to release the most films domestically, at about three-

    quarters of all films. In 2010, non-MPAA members increase in films released (+22) offset the MPAA-

    member studios decrease (-17). The MPAA-member decrease was more concentrated in the

    specialty divisions (subsidiaries) in 2010, as those divisions scaled back.

    Detail: Film Ratings12

    Source: CARA

    Films rated, which includes non-theatrical films, decreased to 706 films in 2010, based mainly on adrop in non-MPAA members films rated. The number of non-MPAA members films rated fluctuates

    annually, but is down over the past two years. MPAA members films rated have been in decline since

    2004, a period mirroring the decline in MPAA member films released in domestic theaters (below).

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    10 vs.

    09

    10

    Film ratings 698 786 939 867 928 853 840 897 793 706 -11% -

    MPAA members 171 296 339 325 322 296 233 201 177 174 -2%Non-members 527 490 600 542 606 557 607 696 616 532 -14%

    Films Rated and Released

    0

    200

    400

    600

    800

    1,000

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    Film ratings

    Films released

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    PG-13 films comprised 12 of the top 25 films in release during 2010. PG films continue to be popular; nine of

    the top 25 films were PG. Three of the top five and six of the top 10 films were released with 3D versions.

    Films of 2010

    Top 25 Films by U.S./Canada Box Office Earned in 2010Source: Rentrak Corporation Box Office Essentials, CARA

    Rank Title Distributor

    Box Office

    (USD MM) Rating 3D

    1 Avatar* Fox $476.9 PG-13 Y2 Toy Story 3 Disney 415.0 G Y

    3 Alice In Wonderland Disney 334.2 PG Y

    4 Iron Man 2 Paramount 312.1 PG-13

    5 The Twilight Saga: Eclipse Summit 300.5 PG-13

    6 Inception** Warner Bros. 292.6 PG-13

    7 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1** Warner Bros. 280.2 PG-13

    8 Despicable Me** Universal 251.1 PG Y

    9 Shrek Forever After Paramount 238.4 PG Y

    10 How To Train Your Dragon Paramount 217.6 PG Y

    11 Karate Kid Sony 176.6 PG

    12 Clash Of The Titans Warner Bros. 163.2 PG-13 Y

    13 Grown Ups Sony 162.0 PG-13

    14 Tangled** Disney 161.3 PG Y

    15 Megamind** Paramount 143.8 PG Y

    16 The Last Airbender Paramount 131.6 PG Y

    17 Shutter Island Paramount 128.0 R

    18 The Other Guys Sony 119.2 PG-13

    19 Salt Sony 118.3 PG-13

    20 Tron Legacy** Disney 117.5 PG Y

    21 Jackass 3D** Paramount 117.1 R Y

    22 Valentine's Day Warner Bros. 110.5 PG-13

    23 Sherlock Holmes* Warner Bros. 106.9 PG-13

    24 Robin Hood Universal 105.3 PG-1325 The Expendables Lionsgate 103.1 R

    *Film opened in 2009; total reflects box office earned from January 1 December 31, 2010

    **Film still in theaters in 2011; total reflects box office earned from January 1 December 31, 2010

    14

    Spotlight: 2010 Film Production14, for Future Theatrical Release

    2008 2009 2010

    % Change

    10 vs. 09

    MPAA members (including subsidiaries) 110 121 98 -19%

    Non-members (est. $1m+ budget) 320 257 233 -9%

    Non-members (est.

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    There are more than 39,500 screens in the U.S. as of 2010, the majority (79%) of which are located at

    venues with 5 or more screens. In 2010, the number of digital screens in the U.S. more than doubled,

    now comprising 40% of U.S. screens. The largest growth was in digital 3D screens more than 4,500

    digital 3D screens were added in the U.S. in 2010, now comprising 50% of U.S. digital screens. Digital

    3D is also growing significantly outside the U.S. (see below).

    U.S. Screens by Type of VenueSource: IHS Screen Digest

    16

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 % of digital

    U.S./Canada 206 994 1,514 3,548 8,459 51%

    EMEA 12 211 594 3,485 7,909 76%

    Asia Pacific 35 80 344 1,584 4,498 56%

    Latin America 5 14 91 362 1,070 91%

    Total 258 1,299 2,543 8,979 21,936 61%

    % change vs. previous year 207% 403% 96% 253% 144% --

    The fastest growing sector of digital screens is 3D. The number of digital 3D screens worldwide

    more than doubled in 2010, reaching 21,936, or about 15% of screens in the world.

    Spotlight: Worldwide Digital 3D ScreensSource: IHS Screen Digest

    U.S. Screens

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    1-4 screen venues 9,888 9,804 9,091 8,673 8,345

    5+ screen venues 28,527 29,170 29,743 30,560 31,202

    Total 38,415 38,974 38,834 39,233 39,547

    U.S. Screens by TypeSource: IHS Screen Digest

    36,412 34,342 33,319 31,815

    23,773

    2,003

    3,646 4,088 4,149

    7,937

    9861,427 3,269

    7,837

    -

    5,000

    10,000

    15,000

    20,000

    25,000

    30,000

    35,000

    40,000

    45,000

    2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

    Digital 3D

    Digital non-3D

    Analog


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