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One of Britain’s last-known video rental stores going strong thanks to retro lure

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BUSINESS is still going strong at one of Britain’s last-known video rental stores — ten years after Blockbuster shut.

Families still come in and browse the shelves for a movie despite the rise of streaming.

Colin Richards owner of T.V.L Allstar Video rental store in Haverhill, Suffolk. Release date – December 29, 2023. See SWNS story SWNAdvd. The owner of Britain's longest surviving rental store says his business survives thanks to grandparents taking children in - for a retro experience. Colin Richards, 70, opened TVL Allstar Video in Haverhill, Suffolk, in 1984 and it originally started as a company that leased video tapes to other shops. He then decided to start renting videos and the store now has around 8,500 DVDs that customers can rent for just £2 a week. This includes Robert Zemeckis' 1994 film Forrest Gump - which has been rented at least 2,000 times. But Colin believes the reason the store is still going is because the younger generation are going to the shop to get a retro experience.
Colin Richards, owner of T.V.L Allstar Video, says that local families in Haverhill, Suffolk, want to share the retro movie browsing experience with their kids
SWNS
01: A man walks past a Blockbuster Video store December 4, 2001 in New York City. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images)
It’s been a decade since Blockbuster was killed off by the rise of streaming
Getty

T.V.L. Allstar Video opened in 1984 with VHS hits including Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and Gremlins.

Today, it boasts 8,500 DVDs that customers can take out for a week — with the current favourite being The Muppet Christmas Carol.

Owner Colin Richards, 70, says local families in Haverhill, Suffolk, want to share the retro movie browsing experience with their kids.

He said: “A lot of our older customers are bringing their children and grandchildren to give them the experience they used to have on a Friday night.

“It’s very infectious because the children won’t even be able to walk past the shop without wanting to come in.

“Normally, they try and rent the same film, their favourite, every time.

“Obviously people have streaming services at home, but the difference is when you come in and pick the movie, you make an effort to sit down and watch it.”

In 1984, a film cost £1.75 a night to rent while now it is £3.25 a week for a new release or £2 for any other.

Grandfather-of-four Colin says his most successful rental is 1994’s Forrest Gump, followed by Sylvester Stallone’s Rambo: First Blood from 1982.

The rise of Netflix and other streaming services gradually killed off the movie rental business, including Blockbuster which closed by the end of 2013.

Colin’s store has also diversified into DVD repairs, photocopying and printing.

Modern young Caucasian couple sitting on the sofa while watching movie on TV
Colin thinks that the renting experience makes customers more likely to sit down and pay attention to films
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