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Goodman's Fields, 2 Canter Way, Whitechapel, London E1 8PS, UK
kontakt telefon: +44 333 321 0104
strona internetowej: www.curzoncinemas.com
większa mapa i wskazówkiLatitude: 51.513772, Longitude: -0.069036
William Moffatt
::Great ambiance, pizza, and drinks. The screens are large and spacious, and the seats are luxurious. Great addition to the area, and I'll definitely be back
Carmen Abogo M
::Really nice place, drink, desserts and food. Service are really polite and is very spacious. The best thing.. The SOFAS, I love sofas..😅😅
William Weston
::Best cinema I've ever been too. Comfy chairs outside cinema, comfy chairs inside cinema, good music, friendly staff. Only problem is price $$$$$
Anjana Silva
::What a lovely Cinema in London. First time I have been to A Curzon and I am already liking the setup of Curzon. Its clean, neat, tidy, comfy and very well organized. The staff is very friendly and respectful. Most likely I will be a loyal customer to Curzon. If you want to experience a Movie with a lovely atmosphere you got to pick this. Thanks.
Melanie Denyer
::As cinemas go, please don't get me wrong, this is not a bad one. It's new, freshly decorated, and has comfy seats. And if I could eat gluten I might well be tempted by getting pizza delivered to my cinema seat. No, I'm marking it down for the missed opportunity to do something sensible for disabled access. There was a big fanfare at their opening about how all the screens have a couple of wheelchair places. I and other wheelchair users reached out on social media and said that the seats looked too close to the screen. We were told we were wrong. Which usually means that somebody decided to put them where it was convenient, and de facto any objection or counter argument would be wrong. So my husband and I finally went to see a film. We took a cab, because parking can be difficult in that area, and I used crutches, because I had not fancied being sat so close to the screen as their wheelchair spaces are placed. I'll say nothing of how far you have to walk to the screens. That's just the way this shakes out sometimes, and while it was too much for me, anyone able-bodied should be fine. But I did have a look at the wheelchair spaces. Seriously, they're too close to the screen. Wheelchair users often have complex physical needs. Sticking them right up close to the screen and telling them they will have to tilt their head back for the duration of the film, assuming they can see properly at that distance, is astonishingly thoughtless and arrogant. Obviously, us cripples should be grateful anyone thought of us at all, but for anyone with muscle control and/or spinal issues, being in that position for the length of a modern film is going to be akin to torture. I was grateful I brought my crutches and could sit further back: hell, if I'd brought my chair, I'd have parked it in the corner and used a stick to move to a more sensible seat, but not all wheelchair users can do that. So sorry, Curzon. But this isn't people seeing a plan and misunderstanding it. This is lived experience trying to make you understand that you're wrong about where you put the wheelchair spaces, and hoping that maybe some day, you'll do better at learning what your disabled customers need and delivering that, even at some inconvenience to yourselves. Wheelchair users are treated as an inconvenience by almost every business space designer. Just once, it would be lovely to see someone get it right.