Hospital cinema shows Hollywood films to patients
BBCA cinema has opened at Manchester Royal Infirmary, which will be able to show blockbuster Hollywood films - sometimes even before their general UK release.
The movie theatre has 50 brightly coloured seats with extra legroom - as well as space for wheelchairs, hospital beds and essential medical equipment.
Elliot Martin from Bury, who saw the cinema's first screening of the latest Minions movie, said: "It is brilliant for patients like me and I hope I can come back again."
The 13 year-old, a patient at the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital, added: "I feel absolutely brilliant and I'd love to watch a Star Wars film here."

The MediCinema is based in a former lecture theatre, close to the main entrance of the MRI, and it will be available to patients across the Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust's hospitals.
The facility launched with a special screening of the children's feature film Minions and Monsters, ahead of its official release in UK cinemas on 1 July.
Rose from Stockport, who is also a patient at the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital, said: "I think it looks great and I love the honeycombs across the wall because it reminds me of the Manchester Bee."
The 12 year-old from Cheadle Hulme added: "I'm going to tell my friends I've watched the new Minions film before its released in normal cinemas."

The cinema cost £1.1m and it was built thanks to a fundraising campaign led by the Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust's charity.
They worked alongside the charity MediCinema, which has opened cinemas at hospitals across the country since launching in 1999.
Colin Lawrence, the Chief Executive of MediCinema, said: "We're really well supported by the film industry and Universal Pictures have enabled us to show the Minions film a week before general release."
"The key thing was finding the right space and this cinema is brilliantly located, close to the bed lifts at the hospital, so the results are worth it".

Julia Birchall-Searle, the Director of Nursing at the Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, said: "The children are so excited and some of our families have waited such a long time for this facility to open."
"It provides some escapism from being a patient and having treatment, so the children can spend valuable time with their families while they're in hospital."
It is hoped the Medicinema will show up to 260 films each year, including the latest Hoillywood blockbusters, family favourites and much-loved classics.
