Despite a change in management at the beginning of 2025, Menton’s only cinema, L’Eden,
has not missed a beat. Quite the opposite: the three-screen venue
continues to broaden its horizons, offering an increasingly eclectic
program designed to reflect the tastes and curiosity of its diverse
local audience. And if 2025 was a year of adjustment, the outlook for
2026 is shaping up to be distinctly optimistic.
“We ended the year on a strong note with Avatar 3 and The Housekeeper,
which were the pleasant surprises of the Christmas holidays,” explains
Jean-Marie Charvet, owner of the cinema. He does, however, acknowledge a
broader national trend: “Attendance was down about 20% over the
year—63,000 admissions in 2025 compared to 80,000 in 2024—which is the
case for most cinemas across France.”
Charvet is clear-eyed about the reasons. “Alongside commercial releases, we were missing at least two major crowd-pullers like Un p’tit truc en plus or Le Comte de Monte-Cristo,
which came out in 2024. To make a year really work, you need those
anchor films.” For a local cinema, the response is adaptation—and
renewal.
The year begins on a decidedly cultural note. From February onward, L’Eden will host a series of events blending cinema, music, and intellectual discovery.
The
highlight for film lovers is a film-concert dedicated to Georges
Brassens, scheduled for Sunday, February 8 at 6:30 p.m. The evening
opens with a live performance by Nicolas Paugam, whose show “Nicolas Paugam tropicalizes Brassens” reimagines the songs of the legendary singer-songwriter, who died in 1981.
In the second half, director Sandrine Dumarais will present a screening of her film The Gaze of Georges Brassens.
Built largely from intimate and moving personal testimonies, the film
reveals a lesser-known side of Brassens. Long before fame, he had taken
up a camera, filming moments of his life—sometimes in color, sometimes
in black and white—and, above all, the people he loved. The result is a
rare, human portrait of an iconic artist. (€15 for the full evening.)
Another
early highlight comes just days later: the first conference of 2026, on
Thursday, February 12 at 3 p.m., devoted to art history. Led by
Françoise Tayar, professor of art history and art photographer, the
lecture will offer an in-depth reading of a series of paintings,
accompanied by projected works.
The
classification is demanding. It requires cinemas to screen so-called
“unique” films—works of undeniable artistic quality that have yet to
find the audience they deserve. In return, the label brings recognition
and access to subsidies from the Ministry of Culture. “We’ll be working
with the Var-based association Artem 83 to develop the artistic and cultural side of the Eden in Menton,” Charvet adds.
While the broader film industry looks promising for
2026, Charvet remains firmly focused on what makes L’Eden unique.
Big-budget films may draw crowds to multiplexes elsewhere on the
Riviera, but Menton’s cinema thrives on proximity, loyalty, and cultural
curiosity—especially among its subscribers.
Discussions about the
cinema’s future have already taken place at Menton’s town hall, though
past projects were shelved as “too expensive” or “too complicated.”
Perhaps, in keeping with the spirit of the City of Lemons, a more
human-scale vision of cinema is exactly what works best.
One thing
is certain: as municipal elections approach next March, the future of
L’Eden—and culture in Menton more broadly—deserves a central place in
the conversation.