At the same time as most of the country's corona restrictions are abolished, a number of major film releases are planned.

This in turn leads to it already being crowded in the cinema program, says Peter Fornstam, who is chairman of the Swedish Cinema Owners' Association.

- Right now we received the message that I am Zlatan who would have risen on 14 January will now come on 18 March.

This cinema that we are at has four premieres just now on Friday, he says.

Narrow movies suffering

But the question is what consequences the huge supply will have.

According to Kulturnyheter's film critic Fredrik Sahlin, it is the narrower films that suffer.

When many big titles are to sail up on the big screens, the films that even before the pandemic had a hard time attracting audiences are pushed aside.

- A normal film may be shown on 30 screens, while larger films such as Bond are shown on 300. And then the smaller films are printed in the margins.

According to Peter Fornstam, the larger films are necessary for the profitability of cinemas.

He states that without the really big premieres, you can not have the smaller ones.

- We always have that debate, it is an ecosystem and we are all dependent on each other, says Peter Fornstam.

In the clip above: Hear the joyous reaction of going to the cinema without restrictions and what the consequences of the tightly packed cinema schedule will be.