Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013 when, happily, the No. 6 had reopened. The cinema has had a very chequered history, but I was told that attendances are healthy (there was certainly a good turnout for ‘Mud’ on my visit) and it is to be hoped this fine cinema, with, reputedly, the largest screen on the south coast, can survive.
Despite the date in the camera data, these photographs were taken in June 2013. This is a community art-house cinema. I was told it is now 51 years old (so it first opened in the early 1960s). In the 1990s a second screen was added, and in c2009 a third. Capacities: Screen 1: 206; Screen 2: 200; Screen 3: 60.
Despite the camera data showing May 2010, these photos were taken in May 2013. This is a truly monumental brick building, sadly derelict. The entrance doors are, it seems, permanently open, giving access to the foyer (the doors to the auditorium are locked). A note on a poster case indicates the cinema might have been open as recently as May 2006, but the posters are from earlier years: ‘Shaft’ and ‘The 6th Day’ from 2000 and ‘Electra’ from 1996.
Despite the camera data showing May 2010, these photos were taken in May 2013. This multiplex is in Mall Varna, only a short distance from the Arena multiplex in the adjacent Grand Mall.
Despite the camera data showing May 2010, these photos were taken in May 2013. This multiplex is only a short distance from the Arena multiplex in the nearby Mall Varna.
Despite the camera data showing May 2010, these photos were taken in May 2013. They show the (indoor) ‘New York City street’ and the four auditorium entrances which have been dressed as NYC movie theatres: the Star Cinema, Globe Theatre, Regal and Broadway. This decoration does not continue into the ‘black box’ auditoriums, but it does show a high degree of imagination for what would otherwise be a standard, top floor shopping mall cinema.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013 – just a week or so, as I understand it, after the cinema opened.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photograph was taken in July 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013 when, happily, the No. 6 had reopened. The cinema has had a very chequered history, but I was told that attendances are healthy (there was certainly a good turnout for ‘Mud’ on my visit) and it is to be hoped this fine cinema, with, reputedly, the largest screen on the south coast, can survive.
Despite the date in the camera data, my photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, these photographs were taken in June 2013.
Despite the date in the camera data, these photographs were taken in June 2013. This is a community art-house cinema. I was told it is now 51 years old (so it first opened in the early 1960s). In the 1990s a second screen was added, and in c2009 a third. Capacities: Screen 1: 206; Screen 2: 200; Screen 3: 60.
Despite the camera data showing May 2010, these photos were taken in May 2013. This is a truly monumental brick building, sadly derelict. The entrance doors are, it seems, permanently open, giving access to the foyer (the doors to the auditorium are locked). A note on a poster case indicates the cinema might have been open as recently as May 2006, but the posters are from earlier years: ‘Shaft’ and ‘The 6th Day’ from 2000 and ‘Electra’ from 1996.
Despite the camera data showing May 2010, these photos were taken in May 2013. This multiplex is in Mall Varna, only a short distance from the Arena multiplex in the adjacent Grand Mall.
Despite the camera data showing May 2010, these photos were taken in May 2013. This multiplex is only a short distance from the Arena multiplex in the nearby Mall Varna.
Despite the camera data showing May 2010, these photos were taken in May 2013. They show the (indoor) ‘New York City street’ and the four auditorium entrances which have been dressed as NYC movie theatres: the Star Cinema, Globe Theatre, Regal and Broadway. This decoration does not continue into the ‘black box’ auditoriums, but it does show a high degree of imagination for what would otherwise be a standard, top floor shopping mall cinema.
The camera data is incorrect: these photos were taken in May 2013.
The camera data is incorrect: these photos were taken in May 2013.
The camera data is incorrect: these photos were taken in May 2013.
Despite what the camera data says, these photos were taken in May 2013.
Despite the camera data, these photos were taken in May 2013.