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Wondering what tomorrow's audience will be like inevitably leads one to question "cinema practices". One speaks of a spectator's "practice" when he or she is a cinema-goer, but this needs to be taken further. The cinema also ought to represent something valuable for the spectator, in some way or other. A practice is thus concerned both with attendance and representation. As a matter of fact, qualifying attendance as occasional, regular or dedicated, points at a specific relationship between the audience and the cinema, whether it be more or less close, more or less devoted, or more or less lasting. It allows us an insight into how our desire is made up and, as a corollary, into how we miss the cinema, into how it matters for us and how much we are prepared to do for it. Cinema-going is akin to a love affair. It implies a "rendez-vous" in all the senses of the word. We "meet" to go to the cinema in real life, and "Second Life" also compels us to make a date when we want to watch a film. And the success of the encounter will condition the next one, and so on. The sociology of cinema audiences teaches us that the way a person values a film is very much dependent on the way others value it, otherwise the film cannot exist. The technological changes that accompany the evolution in cinema-going "practices" must pay great heed to this fundamental fact. If they do not, the "rendez-vous", whether it be in a cinema, in front of a television or computer screen, will lose its quintessentially social aspect and therefore the very meaning attached to cinema "practice" which can never be defined by its apparent onanism but by the actual sharing it implies at all levels. Whether in a cinema, by the cinema, for the cinema, or through the cinema, for direct or oblique purposes, whether for mere occasional entertainment or a genuine passion for films, one is entitled to think and claim that, in order to last, every new cinema-going "practice" should above all be conceived of as a subtle art of the "rendez-vous".
[Vous pouvez retrouver l'intégralité des développements de ce texte sur ce blog sous le titre "Le cinéma, cet art subtil du rendez-vous"]