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  Discover. Preserve. Protect.
Also known as Philips Theatre

Cinema X

Springfield, MA
499 Sumner Avenue
, Springfield, MA, United States
(map)
Status: Closed/Demolished
Screens: Single Screen
Style: Unknown
Function: Unknown
Seats: 500
Chain: Unknown
Architect: Unknown
Firm: Unknown
Add a photo for this theater!
The Philips Theatre (located on Sumner Avenue near Western Massachusetts Theatres' Bing Theatre) was one of several neighborhood theaters operated by Herman Rifkin Theatres.

Sometime in the 1960s, the Philips was renamed Cinema X and showcased "art" films interspersed with soft core porn.

It was razed in the early 90s to make way for a Walgreens.
Contributed by Dr. Russ Durocher


YOUR COMMENTS

 
This theater in now gone. It was torn down around 1990 or 1991 to make room for a Walgreens. My aunt used to manage this theater in the late 70's. The basement was filled with old movie posters from the 50's 60's and 70's. I sure wish I had those posters now. eBAY would make me a millionaire.
posted by Michael D Cavanaugh on Jun 14, 2004 at 6:05pm
The address for the Cinema X was 499 Summer Ave., Springfield, Ma.
posted by Chuck1231 on Nov 18, 2004 at 10:56pm
The Phillips Theater opened in 1923 as The X's and Forest Park's neighborhood theater. It had no balcony and was small inside.
It closed in 1964 and in 1965 became Cinema X with a new marquee.
Art and foreign import films were shown.
Cinema X closed in the mid '80's and remained vacant until being razed around 1991.
posted by EdwardShear on Dec 4, 2004 at 3:45pm
I worked at Cinema x in the mid 1960's. i was the janitor. The "X" was run by a husband and wife team who lived on Wilbraham mountain. In their spare time they would watch tv and time the commercials. I still don't know why. i would get home from high school and bike up the the x. I loved going to work!
We ran movies you could not or would not see any place else. The Umbrellas of Cherbourg with a very young Catherine Deneuve singing all the dialog. I still remember.
My two strongest memories of the "X" were, 1)the Batman serials. Someone put together all the Batman shorts that would run in movie theaters during world war II. Together they ran about six hours. They showed a very strong anti-Japanese/racist face of America. People would come to the show during the day and walk out confused. Then………the late show would start and all the college kids, AIC, Springfield college even UMass kids would show up and the place would rock. I can't remember the comments from the seats but i vividly remember being on my knees laughing so hard i cried.2) i was working in the theater, vacuuming actually, when the machine stopped working. Since the vacuum was older than i was i figured just another breakdown. I went up to the lobby to call the boss when i heard much honking outside. I went to look and found that all the traffic lights were out, cool i thought. I went back inside the theater and then i noticed that the emergency lights were on, strange. I was a little slow but after a while i figured it out, so when someone asks me where i was during Great Northeast Blackout of 1965, i say i was at the "X" working.

Tom
posted by Tom X on Aug 10, 2006 at 11:25am
Tom X, the Batman serial you referenced above, originally shown in 1943, ran at our local 3rd rate theater, the Peerless in Brooklyn, as a re-run a decade later. Flash-forward to 1966: to capitalize on the popularity of the campy Batman TV show, the 8th Street Playhouse in Greenwich Village, NY, and your own Cinema X in Springfield, among others, ran all 4 hours and 20 minutes - with all recaps and coming attractions - of this WWII exercise in adventure and racism. (J. Carroll Naish as the evil Prince Tito Daka was a hoot, though.)

The Batman serial was issued on two VHS tapes in 1988, and earlier this year on DVD, (as was the one from 1949 last year). Expect some dubbed dialog on the first, as Columbia was purchased by Sony back in the '80s. But they did leave the following intact:

Linda, Bruce Wayne's , surprised by Daka in his underground hideout:
"You're a JAP!!!"
Naish, as Daka, lip curling into a sneer:
"Please to say...'Nipponese'."
posted by BrooklynJim on Aug 10, 2006 at 12:36pm
...and speaking of editing (aka censoring), CT's very own "Legion of Decency" filter has struck again! I should've remembered that the word "g - i - r - l" is verboten when I wrote "Bruce Wayne's ****" in the last section above. LOL! At any rate, Shirley Patterson played Linda Page, Bruce Wayne's "girlfriend" or "lady friend." (I just love it when they make me write so &#!%*&@ respectfully...)

[Graffiti written in 3 separate handwritings in a NYU toilet:

"I love grils."

"That's 'G -i- r - l - s,' stupid!"

"What about us grils?"
posted by BrooklynJim on Aug 10, 2006 at 2:03pm
There is a MGM Theatre Photograph and Report form for the Phillips Theatre in Springfield with an exterior photo dated March 1941. The theatre had a narrow free-standing entrance 1-plus story high with a rectangular marquee with "Phillips" on the front, and an arch and cornice above. There was a poster case on the right side of the entrance and what looks like a little ticket booth on the left side. The Report states that the Phillips was at 499 Summer St.,that it had been playing MGM product for over 10 years; was over 20 years old and in Fair condition. The seating was listed as 742 on the main floor and 420 in the balcony, total: 1,162 seats. It was described as having "Neighborhood" patronage.
posted by Ron Salters on Apr 22, 2007 at 8:42am
Th went to the Cinema X in the mid 1980s. At that time it did not show porn films, it was all 2nd run movies. As you entered, you'd go down a short entrance corridor; then the concession stand to the left, the balcony stairs to the right, and straight ahead you'd enter the inner foyer at the back of the auditorium, which went off to the left. The decor was fairly classical, appeared to date from the 1920s. Balcony was closed, the proscenium was hidden behind a screen which had obviously been installed recently. It wasn't in bad shape, and I'm sorry that it didn't survive - by the early 1980s it was closed.
posted by spectrum on May 14, 2007 at 11:22am
Does Cinema Treasures actually delete the word 'girl' from the sentence 'Linda, Bruce Wayne's girl, surprised by Daka in his underground hideout:'?? Let's see....
posted by dave-bronx on May 14, 2007 at 12:08pm
Here is a 1983 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/cannul
posted by ken mc on May 1, 2009 at 9:32pm
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