The document provides a history of British cinema since 1984. It discusses the revival of the British film industry in the 1980s and 1990s, with the rise of multiplex theaters drawing larger audiences. Major production companies like Channel 4 and Handmade Films backed influential films during this time period. The costume drama genre became synonymous with British cinema, though the term was later replaced with "heritage film." By the mid-1990s, films like Four Weddings and a Funeral and Sense and Sensibility showed the two directions of British national cinema. Trainspotting in 1996 enhanced British cinema's international profile and influence on youth films through its portrayal of sex, drugs and working class life.