Kafui Danku-Pitcher and Deputy CEO
James Gardiner, recently toured a number of inactive cinemas across Accra.
These are spaces that once held movie premieres, date nights, and packed-out weekends now sitting empty.
The goal is simple: understand why they’ve gone quiet and figure out how to bring them back to life.
For a while now, cinema culture in Ghana has slowed down. Streaming, low investment, and limited local film distribution have all played a part. But this move signals something different — a push to rebuild the foundation of the industry, not just the surface.
Reviving these cinemas could mean more than just movies. It opens doors for premieres, film festivals, community screenings, and new revenue for creators trying to get their work seen.
If this works, it could quietly reset how Ghanaians experience film again not just on their phones, but in shared spaces.
And for an industry that’s been asking for structure and support, this might be a step in the right direction.
