The latest movie theater news and updates

  • July 3, 2009

    Favoring the ticket kiosk

    Christopher Campbell blogs about his love for the simple ticket kiosks and how they’re still overlooked often.

    Expect long lines at your local box office this week thanks to Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, Public Enemies, and Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs. But remember you can always avoid the long line at the ticket booth by buying your tickets at a ticket kiosk instead. No, you don’t have to have already purchased your tickets online. As long as you have a debit or credit card, you can just walk up to a kiosk and get your tickets easily and quickly. Plus, you avoid at least one impolite theater employee. Certainly this isn’t a new concept, and you’re probably reading this and wanting to comment with something like, “how is this news?”

    But I find it surprising how many times I go to the theater and see people lined up down the block while the kiosks inside sit mostly unused. The lack of traffic to these ticket machines may have something to do with the fact that they’re so quick — those who use them are probably already in the theater, because it only took them a few seconds to get their movie ticket.

    Read the full post at the Weekly Moviegoer.

  • July 2, 2009

    Remembering Cinerama (Part 34: Nanuet/Rockland County)

    REMEMBERING CINERAMA
    Part 34: Nanuet/Rockland County

    The following is Part Thirty-Four in a series of retrospectives on Cinerama, the legendary motion picture process that kicked off the widescreen revolution. The series focuses on providing a market-by-market historical record of when and where Cinerama and its multi-panel clones were exhibited. The easy-to-reference articles serve to provide nostalgia to those who experienced the Cinerama presentations when they were new and to highlight the movie palaces in which the memorable events took place.

    Part 1: New York City
    Part 2: Chicago
    Part 3: San Francisco
    Part 4: Houston
    Part 5: Washington, DC
    Part 6: Los Angeles
    Part 7: Atlanta
    Part 8: San Diego
    Part 9: Dallas
    Part 10: Oklahoma City
    Part 11: Syracuse
    Part 12: Toronto
    Part 13: Columbus
    Part 14: Montreal
    Part 15: Northern New Jersey
    Part 16: Charlotte
    Part 17: Vancouver
    Part 18: Salt Lake City
    Part 19: Boston
    Part 20: Philadelphia
    Part 21: Fresno
    Part 22: Detroit
    Part 23: Minneapolis
    Part 24: Albuquerque
    Part 25: El Paso
    Part 26: Des Moines
    Part 27: Miami
    Part 28: Orange County
    Part 29: Pittsburgh
    Part 30: Baltimore
    Part 31: Long Island
    Part 32: Kansas City
    Part 33: Milwaukee

    And now… Part 34: Cinerama Presentations in Nanuet/Rockland County, New York!

  • Laserium takes over Hollywood’s Vine Theatre

    HOLLYWOOD, CA — The movies have ended at the 1937 theater originally known as the Admiral, later the Vine. Yet there are several screens set up in the theater just off the world-famous corner of Hollywood & Vine.

    Laserium, which enjoyed a nearly 30-year run at the Griffith Observatory, has taken over the Hollywood movie house, which for years had played second-run double features to audiences that often numbered in the single digits. Will Pink Floyd, the Beatles, and Led Zep set to lasers be enough to lure a serious tourist crowd and not just nostalgic L.A. stoners? I wrote about the rebirth of Laserium, and the theater’s unusual adaptive reuse, in this L.A. Times story.

    Walk into the Vine Theatre’s auditorium and you may be shocked at how much it still looks like the second-run movie house it was until late 2007. About 200 seats were removed to make way for a stage area and control panels in the rear — but the 424 that remain are the same funky orange seats that moviegoers of a few years ago will recall. They don’t recline like the Observatory’s chairs, but they don’t need to: Producers insist the days of chiropractor-friendly neck-craning have come to an end, because all the action is at panoramic eye level. Each show starts with animations projected on the former movie screen, then expands the action to three semi-transparent scrims closer to the audience, two additional screens on the side walls, mirrors, and — new to the Laserium experience, surprisingly enough — real mid-air effects.

    “We weren’t allowed to put haze in the planetarium to light up laser beams,” explains Dryer, “so we really couldn’t do beam effects very well there, which always frustrated us”

    Read the full post at the Los Angeles Times.

  • Varsity Theatre closes its doors forever

    CHAPEL HILL,NC — After initially reporting the possibility, as of Friday, June 26,2009….the only movie theatre located in Downtown Chapel Hill, the Varsity Theatre, closed its doors forever.

    The Varsity, whose theater marquee is the icon of Franklin Street, is closing according to its owner Bruce Stone. Despite rumors and blogs that said the theater was going to close, it wasn’t official until Stone made the announcement on Thursday, June 25, 2009.

    The theater has been in business for 80 years and it is considered to be a Chapel Hill landmark serving not only the residents and patrons, but also serving the entire communities of Orange County, including nearby University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The last two picture shows that played at the Varsity were “The Hangover”, and “The Brothers Bloom”.

    More on this at the Herald Sun(reg rqr’d).

  • July 1, 2009

    Classic Film Theaters in New Jersey and New York?

    It seems that showing “classic” films in theaters today can often be a hit-or-miss project.
    I’ve attended classic film programs at the great Loews Jersey, the Lafayette, Suffern, New York, Film Forum and the Cedar Lane Cinema in Teaneck, NJ……. are there any other venues in the New Jersey/New York area that show classic and independent films on a regular basis?

  • Morningside Theatre info

    NEW YORK, NY — The following is a request for a new member, Marya Pollack, looking for information regarding the Morningside Theatre, once run by her family:

    My great-grandmother ran it from about 1908-1915 and I believe other family members before her. I have a copy of the theatre license but can you help me track down any paperwork they might have filed? My great aunt used to play the piano for the movies there. I have some pictures of actors but I don’t know if they were part of this theatre.

    For over a decade all I had was Amalia Steinberg’s calling card with a fragment of the theatre name. The license gives the exact address 2135-8 8th Ave as well as another theatre at 1217 Prospect Ave.

    I’d love to find out who actually filled out the request for the license as there are no first names on it. Amalia’s maiden name was Weissman (Wiseman, Weisman) and she married a Bernard Steinberg, who ran several restaurants but she is listed in the NYC Directory as “theatre owner” after he died in 1908. Much of the two families were reportedly in theatre and early film in Manhattan and “amusements” in Coney Island, but it has been a huge struggle to find anything out. Another relative, Samuel Weisman is listed as working at “Philum’s Motion Picture Studio.”

    Any help would be appreciated. Thanks

  • How to cope with sensory integration at the movie theater for your special need kids

    This article discusses issues that may arise from taking a special needs child to the movies.

    Do your children with special needs enjoy going to the movies? It is often a somewhat traumatic experience, yet the joys of modern day entertainment on the big screen are enough to entice you kids into the theater.

    Here are common reasons a child will have trouble in a modern day movie theater.

    Sound levels – With the new digital sound offered in many theaters, the film’s noise level is worthy of a good pair of ear plugs for even those of who hear normally. But, for someone with super sensitive hearing, that noise level is enough to hurt them or drive them insane in a really short amount of time.

    Read the full story in the Examiner.

  • June 30, 2009

    Drive-in in danger of closing

    GLEN DALE, WV — The Glen Dale Drive-in might close due to poor business.

    The Glendale Drive-In Theater, located in Marshall County, is in jeopardy of closing unless more movie goers start showing up, 7 News learned.

    The owners say they’re doing all they can to keep the drive-in open. Friday night they’re bringing in a live band to begin at 7p.m. and play up until the movie starts and then the band will begin performing again during the intermission between the two movies.

    Read the full story in the State Journal.

  • RealD achieves 100% growth worldwide

    More and more theaters are equipping themselves for RealD as the company makes huge gains.

    RealD announced today that it has doubled its installation base of RealD 3D equipped cinema screens worldwide and notched 400% growth in Europe in the first half of 2009. Far and away the world’s largest 3D cinema platform, RealD’s network of theatres is expanding at a breathtaking clip, nearly doubling the number of 3D cinema installations of all other 3D providers combined. The RealD 3D platform now accounts for over 8,700 screens under contract and over 3,200 screens installed in more than 45 countries with over 200 exhibition partners.

    Read more at MarketWatch.

  • Cinemark makes deal with T.I.

    Trying to keep up with Sony, Texas Instruments announces a deal with Cinemark along with mentioning they will be rolling out 4K projectors next year.

    Current leader Texas Instruments has revealed that during 2010 it aims to incorporate 4K resolution as part of its next-gen projection technology platform, which will be offered in projectors from its licensees Barco, Christie Digital and NEC.

    Meanwhile, Barco inked a significant deal with Cinemark to deploy the developing 4K technology exclusively on all Cinemark screens.

    Read more at The Wrap.