Today there are around 25 cinemas to choose from in Edinburgh – ranging from the tiny screen in The Banshee Labyrinth pub to the huge multiplex Vue at Ocean Terminal.
But in the recent past there was barely an Edinburgh neighbourhood that didn’t have its own local film house.
In the first half of the 20th century there were more than 120 cinemas opened in the capital.
It was the heyday of the silver screen when there was no other way to see your favourite actor’s latest performance or the new must-see awards contender.
And there was plenty of local talent on show – from the wee dog who played Greyfriars Bobby, to Sean Connery making the role of James Bond his own.
Many of the cinemas ended up being demolished or were turned into bingo halls from the late 1960s when people started to stay at home in front of the television instead.
In the week when it’s been announced that the Edinburgh Filmhouse is to close we take a trip back to what was happening in Edinburgh’s cinemas over 50 years ago.
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21. Wheely hard work
Employees had to take the wheels off a racing car to get it into the foyer of the Odeon CInema, in Edinburgh, for a film premiere in May 1966. Photo: Unknown

22. Long gone
The exterior of the Regent cinema, in Abbeyhill, which was demolished in the 1970s. Photo: JPI Media

23. Royal visitors
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh leave the ABC Cinema in September 1964 after watching a film about the Forth Road Bridge. Photo: Unknown

24. Spy parents
Sean Connery's mother and father at Edinburgh's New Vic Cinema to see their son play James Bond in the film Dr No in October 1962. Photo: Unknown