Instead of cinephany, it would perhaps be better to speak of cine-hierophany as a way of preserving the sense of the sacred (hieros in Greek) in the name, all the more so in that what is at stake in our comments is this “sacred” quality that films seen in movie theatres have for cinephiles and the “desacralisation” of cinema brought on by the advent of digital technology. On this note, we cannot avoid mentioning the neologism “filmophanic” coined by Souriau (to describe “every aspect of the presentation of a film projected for viewers in a movie theatre”), a term that has a fairly direct connection (projection, viewers, movie theatre) with the issue that connects the elements we discuss here. See Étienne Souriau, “Préface,” in Étienne Souriau, ed., L’univers filmique (Paris: Flammarion, 1953), p. 8.