AMC Boston Common 19

175 Tremont Street,
Boston, MA 02111

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Showing 76 - 100 of 118 comments

maquaranto
maquaranto on December 2, 2007 at 6:24 pm

This is the definition below from wikipedia on Real D. I notice the screens are newer and more reflective from an up close perspective.

“The Real D 3-D system was invented by Lenny Lipton, an American inventor. It is based on the push-pull electro-optical modulator called the ZScreen.

The technique that Real D uses is similar to the traditional method of 3-D imaging using polarized glasses. The traditional method works by projecting two differently polarized images onto the same screen, which are then filtered by polarized glasses worn by the audience. This type of 3-D imaging requires two projectors. Real-D however uses a single projector that alternately projects the left-eye frame and right-eye frame, and appropriately polarizes these frames using a liquid-crystal screen placed in front of the projector lens. The polarized glasses make sure each eye sees only “its own” picture. The very high framerate, which is 72fps per eye, makes sure the image looks continuous. In Real D Cinema, each frame is projected three times to reduce flicker, as the source video is usually 24fps. The result is a 3-D picture that seems to extend behind and in front of the screen itself."

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on December 2, 2007 at 6:07 pm

What does “Real D” mean, and what does a house have to do to be able to project 3D?

maquaranto
maquaranto on December 2, 2007 at 3:52 pm

I apologize. I will refrain from posting this in the future and will contribute without mentioning our business services.

HowardBHaas
HowardBHaas on December 2, 2007 at 3:45 pm

Telling us which auditoriums are 3D, etc is interesting, but advertising your cleaning service is NOT.

We’d all be eager for you to add cinemas and link photos. A subtle phrasing that accompanies an Intro or linked photos that you are familiar with the theater via your cleaning employment would sound ok to me.

maquaranto
maquaranto on December 2, 2007 at 3:06 pm

Mr Newman,
I don’t think of it as spam. I go through each theater’s comments and see if I have anything to add, I wanted to let you know this theater cares about the condition of its viewing suface for its patrons.
If I can add any notes or photos about the theater I will in an entry. I am working on posting several new theaters not yet posted on this site in the US, Canada and South America and will try to add any information and photos that may be helpful to anyone on this forum, after all we visit hundreds of theaters during the year.
Please feel free to contact me at any time at mikeCapitol Theatrecinemaservices.com .
Michael

moviebuff82
moviebuff82 on December 2, 2007 at 1:12 pm

there should be a policy on spammers on CT, just like what Myspace and other sites use. Thankfully, no porn messages on this site!!!

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on December 2, 2007 at 12:51 pm

Will you please quit spamming every theatre page with this advertisement?

maquaranto
maquaranto on December 2, 2007 at 12:41 pm

This theater had its screens professionally cleaned by 1570 Cinema Services (www.1570cinemaservices.com) 10/17/07.
House #8 is Real D. House #16 is 3D.

IanJudge
IanJudge on May 11, 2007 at 1:51 pm

This seems to be the case with many AMC theaters in the Boston area.

I have not heard good things about their operations from many people, from either a customer standpoint or from former/current staff. AMC apparently has many customer service related policies that staff must memorize, etc., but what good is a silly across-the-board policy like that when you are not going to maintain the buildings or pay for a decent projectionist to ensure the picture quality is good?

If you are charging top dollar for movies downtown like AMC, the place should be clean and staffed, and the picture should be in focus, in frame, and not scratched. If theaters just focused on these basic functions, it would make a lot more patrons happy than rote memorization of customer service catchphrases.

PNRNetworks
PNRNetworks on May 11, 2007 at 1:12 pm

The truth is that this theater, once our favorite in the Boston area, has gone straight into the toilet since AMC took over. When Loews ran it, it was always clean, there were always people you could find to bring a concern to, the snack bar personnel were always polite and friendly, and the ticket kiosks always worked. Now virtually NONE of that is true.

One of the last times we were at this theater, about a year ago, we had to wait in a line to see X-Men:The Last Stand. The CARPET was so sticky my shoes stuck to it rather resolutely, and I had to grab my wife’s hand to hold while I wrested them free. Two weeks later we went back to see another movie, and the carpet was STILL sticky – it obviously had not been touched since two weeks prior. And the same ticket kiosks that were broken the two times before were STILL inoperable.

We haven’t been back since, and although we may hit the theater simply as a stop on our website’s summer tour of local Boston cinemas, even though we’ve been there before, we don’t have definate plans to do so. Pity, because we used to like going there quite a bit…

Archie1959
Archie1959 on February 7, 2007 at 7:06 pm

Two weeks ago on a Saturday night, I went to see Letters from Iwo Jima @ The Boston Common Cinema @ 10:50 P.M. If you can belive this, there was no attempt to clean the cinema and there was no usher to be found in cinemas 3-9. I even made an attempt to write a letter to the cinema and to the Atlanta GA address on the web site, but no resonse from either party. I would have made an attempt to find a manager, but is was after one in the morning and all I could find for people working were cleaning crews they did not have AMC shirts on. Any one have any suggestions if I ever have this problem again? The old management would have this matter resolved quickly.

Boywonder
Boywonder on October 8, 2006 at 7:01 am

While the screen sizes in this theater (and Fenway) are impressive, the understaffing and general disrepair of this theater are at times, frustrating.

But, I guess that’s just the way “new” theaters are these days.

I’ve seen Romney at this theater before, and he had to stand in the same long line to get his “dots”…so what can you do?

Mike1252
Mike1252 on September 26, 2006 at 10:02 pm

As seems to be the trend on this page, I too have managed the boston common theater. I am now, however the GM at Harvard Square. The facilities got better as the building settled (i.e. fewer and fewer alarms, until they eventually vanished altogether). The other operational issues of the building remain though. And in defense, the film festival problems are primarily due to lack of information sent to theatre management from the film festival organizers.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on September 3, 2006 at 6:08 pm

I walked into Loews Boston Common this afternoon, hoping to find a program booklet, a brochure, or at the very least a displayed advertising poster for the Boston Film Festival, which starts in five days.

The first few employees I talked to knew nothing about any upcoming festival. After about 10 minutes, I found a manager, who said they had received no printed material. He did offer to print out a schedule for me, however. The four-page printout lists the names and showtimes of films, but contains no descriptions. It does not match the schedule on the web site, so I have no idea which one is correct.

The web site still says “Coming Soon” where the list of film descriptions should be. Also “Coming Soon” are the list of special appearances, and the current press releases (2006 News).

The site’s front page starts with “In the tradition of benchmark film festivals like Sundance, Venice, and Telluride.” I don’t think so! If this festival can’t get its act together very soon, it’s going to go away entirely.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on August 29, 2006 at 1:09 pm

The Boston Film Festival will once again take place at Loews Boston Common, September 8-15.

But with just a week to go before the festival opens, the web site is frustratingly incomplete, with “Coming Soon” where the list of films should be, and “TBA” scheduled for the festival’s last day. Even the press-release page is empty.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on August 29, 2006 at 1:09 pm

The Boston Film Festival will once again take place at Loews Boston Common, September 8-15.

But with just a week to go before the festival opens, the web site is frustratingly incomplete, with “Coming Soon” where the list of films should be, and “TBA” scheduled for the festival’s last day. Even the press-release page is empty.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on January 26, 2006 at 6:02 pm

When I walked by around 7:30 pm, they hadn’t taken down any of the Loews signage. I expect that process will take a few months.

Archie1959
Archie1959 on January 26, 2006 at 5:50 pm

The AMC/Lowes merger was completed today. The AG of MA informed AMC that they must sell their cinema that is near Fenway Park in Boston for competition purporses. Right now, the rumor is Showcase Cinemas is interested in the Fenway property due to the age of the Cirle Cinema. If I have a choice between the two I would rather go to the Boston Common cinema. The problem I have with Boston Common is that if you are in screens 3-9, the leg room is tight. If you are in screens 1 or 2 they are very good leg room. Screen 2 seats over 600 people. 10-19 are good except a couple of the cinemas are tight on leg room. Screen 17 or 18 is their digital projection. If a feature is playing on more that one screen, I ask for the biggest auditorium before buying a ticket. And if you don’t want to pay double digit prices for movies, AAA sells passes. I think a book of 4 is under 30.00

SDyer777
SDyer777 on October 6, 2005 at 8:27 am

I live in the Back Bay in Boston, very near the Boston Common theater. I was very happy when it opened. Before that all we had were the Copley Square cinemas and the Cheri, and both were terrible. I simply didn’t go to the movies back then. For a while the Boston Common was great, but it has seriously slipped lately.

It is tremendously understaffed, and the people who are working there are poorly trained. The movie-going experience there is not good. Several times I have sat in a theater with crying babies – literally screaming through the whole movie. I went out to get an usher but could find no one. Finally I got a manager, but he did nothing. I’ve gotten my money back twice from them for situations like that.

The last straw was this summer, when I went to see Charlie and the Chocolate Factory the day it opened. Being opening night, the crowd started to gather about an hour before hand. There was no one to take tickets or organize the line. Everyone just stood in a crowd in the corridor. After a while a very clueless employee started to put up the post-and-strap dividers, with the apparent goal of making a zig-zag line for us all to stand in. He couldn’t figure it out and ended up making one dead-end line, and also fully enclosed another group of people. It took two other employees a half hour to figure out how to set up the posts and dividers. The whole time the crowd was laughing at their efforts. Needless to say the crowd ended up just being a mob, jockeying for position near the front.

With tickets for that place up to nearly $11 each, and food very expensive, I’m tired of paying $40 or $50 for a mediocre movie experience. I go to the movies very rarely now, which is a shame, because I love movies. There is just no good place to see them in Boston.

I predict that there will be no new theaters built in Boston, or anywhere. With home theater offering better and better experiences, and movie houses offering worse and worse experiences, people have no incentive to go out to the movies. With no customers, no one will want to run a labor-intensive business like a movie theater.

BTW: The Back Lot was completely cleared out the last time I was there. No furniture, and the overhead monitor screens were gone.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on September 11, 2005 at 10:24 am

Last night I went to the Boston Film Festival to see ‘Buddy’, a documentary about the former mayor of Providence that is well worth seeing. It will be shown again there tomorrow night — the only film this year to get a repeat showing.

I saw a poster for ‘Elizabethtown’ at the theatre, but it’s not part of the festival.

br91975
br91975 on September 11, 2005 at 9:25 am

Agreed, Ian; the Independent Film Festival of Boston is a super film festival. I’ve managed to catch a few screenings when I’ve been back home and I’ve been very impressed – with the quality and diversity of the films which have been shown, the guests who’ve come to town with their films (Steve Buscemi and Bill Pullman, I know of, to name a couple), the panels, and the overall operation.

The Boston Film Festival could be a great compliment to the IFFB, catching the films ready to make the festival rounds in the fall; to think of the slate of films this year’s festival alone could have brought to town: ‘Shopgirl’, ‘A History of Violence’, ‘Elizabethtown’, ‘Brokeback Mountain’… the list goes on…

IanJudge
IanJudge on September 10, 2005 at 7:41 am

Boston is already getting a superior film festival – the Independent Film Festival of Boston, which has been well documented in the local major newspapers as being the film festival Boston has deserved for years. It takes place at the Coolidge, Brattle, MFA, and Somerville theaters. Every year it gets more popular and has a stronger and remarkable schedule of independent films. They have a website, www.iffboston.org

br91975
br91975 on September 10, 2005 at 5:52 am

The ideal for the Boston Film Festival would be for it to be helmed by a committee consisting of Robin Dawson (who I understand is heading operations for this year’s festival) and the programming directors of the Brattle and Coolidge Corner Theatres and the film program at the MFA. The result would be a group of individuals who have contacts within the world of Hollywood (Dawson) and those who have the same within the art-house and independent film worlds. There’d obviously be a lot of work to do to achieve a modicum of its reputation, but at worst Boston could potentially have a film festival that could potentially at some point be mentioned in the same breath as the NY Film Festival.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on September 10, 2005 at 5:26 am

The Boston Film Festival has been cut to five days, September 9-13, and will take place only at Loews Boston Common. The event feels like it’s on the verge of disappearing, with no advertising and much less newspaper coverage than I’m used to seeing.

When I dropped by the theatre last night, I saw no signs in the lobby for the festival, and was directed up to the third floor to pick up a program from an unmarked pile on the concession-stand counter.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on July 20, 2005 at 3:35 am

The Boston Film Festival, which was held for many years at the late unlamented Copley Place Cinemas, will be split this year between Loews Boston Common and Loews Harvard Square.

It will be shorter than last year’s, just seven days instead of ten, September 9-15. Last week’s Somerville Journal had an article about the festival:

Diamond’s not forever: Robin Dawson takes over the Boston Film Festival