Ultimate Picture Palace
53 Jeune Street,
Oxford,
OX4 1BN
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Additional Info
Architects: John R. Wilkins
Functions: Movies (First Run), Movies (Foreign), Movies (Independent)
Previous Names: East Oxford Picture Palace, Penultimate Picture Palace, Section 6 Cinema
Phone Numbers:
Box Office:
440778.623.5121
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The Ultimate Picture Palace is a small single screen theater located on Jeune Street near St. Clements Street, off Cowley Road. Opened on 25th February 1911 as the East Oxford Picture Palace. After operating as a cinema for a few years it closed around 1920.
From then, the building was used for storage for almost six decades before opening as a cinema again on 18th July 1976, as the Penultimate Picture Palace with 185 seats.
The building is Grade II Listed.
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Recent comments (view all 13 comments)
A few vintage shots of the Penultimate dating from 1986 here:–
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The Penultimate Picture Palace / Ultimate Picture Palace is 100 years old in 2011.
To mark the centenery we are making a documentary film about this historic oxford landmark.
If you have memories or stories about the cinema we’d love to hear from you.
email: .uk
or visit the website at: www.picturepalace.org.uk (sign up for our newsletter there)
or follow us on Facebook
O.K.
Current number of seats at the Ultimate Picture Palace, Jeune Street, off Cowley Road, Oxford: 121.
(via email from the cinema)
I saw many a picture at the PPP in the early 80s, including ALL of Bertolucci’s ‘1900’. They issued handy discount cards to we poor students. It was always cheaper than the Phoenix across town.
(I wonder what happened to the Jolson/Jazz Singer 3-D sign/sculpture?)
projection room accessed via ladder just by paybox outside
Great to see this cinema still running after all of these years. Not the Moulin Rouge ( http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/41623 ) was not so lucky.
Watched The Good, the Bad and the Ugly here around 1980. Has the projection, sound system and seats been upgraded over the years?
LARGE_screen_format: According to the “History” page on the cinema’s website, the cinema was acquired by a local person, Becky Hallsmith, in 2011. Digital projection/replacement screen were added, and the sound system “upgrad[ed],” alongside “redecorations.” Subsquently, the seating was replaced also.
Alas, Ms. Hallsmith passed away last year; however, it is to become a “community-owned” business—so you, too, can own a “piece” of the cinema!
The cinema is the subject of an ~1 hour long documentary, “The Ultimate Survivor;” which can be viewed on the linked page.
I was always intrigued as to the old name of this cinema The Penultimate Picture Palace. Apparently this arose from a discussion between the previous owner and his bank manager we who said words to the effect that this was the second stupidest business proposition he had heard.
@CF100 - The Ultimate Survivor documentary that you linked to was very interesting and a real trip down memory lane.
Thank you.