To make life even more easy for movie fans, Kinepolis Group in collaboration with Craftworkz has recently
 baptised Bert. Bert is a chatbot that not only provides information 
about the current showtimes at the Kinepolis theatres, but is also able 
to order tickets for you. To do so, the bot will ask a few additional 
questions so all parameters are already filled in for the customer, only
 the seats have yet to be selected in the final step of process. So 
easy! Bert is our new friend… 
Of course, Bert also provides information about the currently scheduled 
films, the actors that play in it and their trailers. He answers 
questions such as: "What movies are they playing today in Leuven?", "I 
would like to see a comedy", "Show me the trailer for the new Lion 
King", and so on.
Responsive film encyclopaedia.
But Bert is even more intelligent than that. The new chatbot is not only
 useful when you want to go to the theatres now, it also provides 
information on older films. It happened to all us to forget an actor’s 
name of a certain movie during a conversation. Or to forget the title of
 Leo Di Caprio’s breakthrough movie. That’s a thing of the past now. 
Kinepolis Group has added to Bert’s memory all information about the top
 250 films on IMDb, short for the Internet Movie Database, since 1950. 
So Kinepolis’ chatbot is also a responsive encyclopaedia for film 
lovers, or for anyone debating in which year a certain film aired and 
which actors played the leading roles.
                    Human conversation in Flemish and soon more.
The chatbot is currently in a test phase within Facebook Messenger and 
only available in Dutch. If successful, the rollout in the other 
national languages will follow shortly and new functions will be added
 too. For example, if you would like to pay for your parking ticket 
right away, then Bert will be able to arrange this for you in the 
future. 
The choice for a single-language start is an informed decision. “We want
 Bert, who runs on our chatbot engine Oswald, to be good at supporting 
our local languages”, says Michiel Vandendriessche, managing partner. 
“We have built our own standard language for Dutch, so that Oswald now 
has a good notion of Flemish. Also, today’s machine learning engines can
 interpret sentences, within a certain context, and so not only words. 
This approach is time intensive but allows to get better results. A 
French version will follow asap.” 
Matteus Deloge, technical architect, adds: “We have fed Bert with 
example sentences related to films: ‘Which films are currently playing 
in Antwerp’. It’s not what we would assume, but people are not sending 
‘films + Antwerp’ to chatbots. They have a proper, human discussion in 
full sentences with Bert. And if there are questions that Bert cannot 
answer, they will be forwarded and we can add them to the model if 
necessary.”