The peculiarity of theaters and cinemas is that people come not only for the sake of the spectacle. The cinema is a meeting place, a place of rest from the hustle and bustle. Here, in a dim hall, a person plunges into another life.
In Soviet times, the concept of "going to the cinema" implied a whole ritual. Even tickets were sometimes bought at the advance ticket office. Those who did not have a ticket in advance had to stand in line. This is especially characteristic of the so-called "days" – the Days of French cinema, the Days of Italian cinema.
Queues at the box office gathered for Indian films, especially beloved by Soviet viewers. The audience sobbed at the films "The Tramp", "Flower in the Dust", "Love in Simla" and sighed with relief at the last shots, where the characters sang and danced. Adults and children loved movies about Indians. Everyone knew the name of Goiko Mitic, the performer of the role of the famous Chingachgook. Pandemonium at the box office was during the days of the screening of "Fantomas", a cult film about an elusive villain, or films about the beautiful Angelica ("Angelica — Marquise of Angels", "Angelica and the King").
Many Soviet films were not inferior to foreign ones at the box office. The film "The Quiet Don", films with Lyubov Orlova, the film "Shield and Sword", films with G. Zhzhenov as a spy ("Resident's Mistake", "Resident's Fate"), "No one wanted to die", films about youth problems ("Let's live to Monday", "Little Faith"). The films touched the soul and were not forgotten immediately after leaving the cinema.
In Soviet cinemas, it was customary to show a documentary film magazine before the film. Usually it was "News of the Day" or "Foreign Chronicle". The audience not only enjoyed the film, but also broadened their horizons and "savvy" politically.
The names of the cinemas of the Soviet Union spoke for themselves. Probably, in many cities there were: Udarnik, Pobeda, Giant, Rocket, October, Motherland, Friendship, Moscow, Sputnik, Spartak, Tsentralny, Mir, Iskra, Sovremennik, Artistic.
Going to the cinema was small, but an event. They put on a festive dress, a suit, shoes, asked a girlfriend for earrings, a friend for a tie.