Société anonyme (with board of directors) |
|
Founded | 1971 |
Headquarters | Neuilly-sur-Seine, France |
Area served
|
France, Spain, Belgium, Italy |
Key people
|
Guy Verrecchia (President) Alain Sussfeld (CEO) |
Number of employees
|
845 |
Website | www |
UGC is the second largest cinema operator in Europe with, as of August 2013, 45 sites and 488 screens across four countries:
In 2002 the company sold 64 million tickets.
UGC was originally an exclusively French operator, created in 1971 from a merger of several regional cinema companies. The name originally stood for Union Générale Cinématographique, but today only the initials are used. The company is focused on the business side of the film business and French-dubbed versions, showing little interest in the screening of artistic cinema, on the contrary to Pathé and Gaumont cinemas, except in some UGC Paris theatres where the programming is very diversified and includes both subtitled and dubbed versions. Out of Paris, in some cities like Nantes or Lyon, a part of this diversified programming does exist, but mostly UGC cinemas are like Pathé and Gaumont cinemas. Its competitors include EuroPalaces, Cinéville, CGR, MK2 and Kinepolis Group.
UGC was formerly also a leading UK cinema owner following the purchase of Richard Branson's Virgin Cinema Group, which it purchased in October 1999. In December 2004, the business was sold to Blackstone Group and joined with Cine-UK to trade as Cineworld. UGC's chain in the UK and Ireland consisted of:
In July 2005, Cineworld began to phase out the UGC brand, replacing it with its own Cineworld logo. This rebranding was completed in September 2005. Cineworld has retained certain aspects of the UGC offer, including the Unlimited season ticket, originally introduced by Virgin, and the free magazine of the same name.
UGC Fox Distribution — joint venture with 20th Century Fox