The Belgian Utopolis theatres were sold oktober 1st to the UGC-Belgium group. kinepolis was forced to sell 2 of the Utopolis theatres because the group would have been to dominant on the belgian market, but they chose to sell all four theatres.
The Belgian Utopolis theatres were sold oktober 1st to the UGC-Belgium group. kinepolis was forced to sell 2 of the Utopolis theatres because the group would have been to dominant on the belgian market, but they chose to sell all four theatres.
The Belgian Utopolis theatres were sold oktober 1st to the UGC-Belgium group. kinepolis was forced to sell 2 of the Utopolis theatres because the group would have been to dominant on the belgian market, but they chose to sell all four theatres.
The Belgian Utopolis theatres were sold oktober 1st to the UGC-Belgium group. kinepolis was forced to sell 2 of the Utopolis theatres because the group would have been to dominant on the belgian market, but they chose to sell all four theatres.
The Omnia Pathe Cinema was one of the earliest cinemas in Paris, opening on 14th December 1906. In the 30ths it became a newsreel cinema, seating 700 and first named Cinéphone-Petit Parisien, then “Cinéphone-Montmartre”. In 1946 it returns to showing regular movies, named California with 590 seats. The theatre starts a new chapter after transformations in 1959 returning to the name Omnia, equipped for 70mm movies and seating 680. In the 70ths the theatre is twinned and named Omnia Boulevards, before becoming an X-rated cinema in 1979. After the last transformation in 1982 into 3 screens, it’s named Arcades and shows regular movies once more, but closes only 5 years later in 1987. (The number of seats was 587: 299 + 189 + 99, not 250!/ and 3 screens instead of 1)
Located in the south of the city centre, the Delambre opened as a single screen in 1933, seating 600 with the balcony. In the first half of the 70ths, it became cinema showing X-rated films and was split up in 1977 into 3 screens (seating 260, 100 and 80).
After a take-over and complete renovation in 1983 it became the little brother of the nearby 7 Parnassiens, named 3 Parnassiens. But the cinema only lasted 6 years and closed may 16, 1989.
Utopolis Emmen was opened in 2005, originally designed by Kinepolis to be it’s first Dutch theatre, it was finally left to the Utopolis-chain but since kinepolis took over Utopolis in 2015 it will change it’s name to Kinepolis Emmen in the near future!All seven screens are side by side, allowing for a single projection room. There is a café & bar in the foyer.
The Vendome has 5 screens and not 7, as can be seen above the entrance doors: 5 salles. The first 3 of the former Le Roy cinema are the main screen + 2 extra screens on the former Balcony. 2 additional screens were created by opening up the back wall of the adjoining closed down L'Empire on the Chaussee d'Ixelles. The screens and projection booth were inversed, thus allowing the ground floor to become a supermarket that uses the former entrance.
Bart3049
commented about
Zinemaon
Jan 28, 2015 at 2:09 pm
Utopolis became Kinepolis Kirchberg om march 15 2017.
Demolished last week!
April 2017: name changed to Kinepolis Oss. https://kinepolis.nl/bioscopen/kinepolis-oss
The Belgian Utopolis theatres were sold oktober 1st to the UGC-Belgium group. kinepolis was forced to sell 2 of the Utopolis theatres because the group would have been to dominant on the belgian market, but they chose to sell all four theatres.
The Belgian Utopolis theatres were sold oktober 1st to the UGC-Belgium group. kinepolis was forced to sell 2 of the Utopolis theatres because the group would have been to dominant on the belgian market, but they chose to sell all four theatres.
The Belgian Utopolis theatres were sold oktober 1st to the UGC-Belgium group. kinepolis was forced to sell 2 of the Utopolis theatres because the group would have been to dominant on the belgian market, but they chose to sell all four theatres.
The Belgian Utopolis theatres were sold oktober 1st to the UGC-Belgium group. kinepolis was forced to sell 2 of the Utopolis theatres because the group would have been to dominant on the belgian market, but they chose to sell all four theatres.
The Omnia Pathe Cinema was one of the earliest cinemas in Paris, opening on 14th December 1906. In the 30ths it became a newsreel cinema, seating 700 and first named Cinéphone-Petit Parisien, then “Cinéphone-Montmartre”. In 1946 it returns to showing regular movies, named California with 590 seats. The theatre starts a new chapter after transformations in 1959 returning to the name Omnia, equipped for 70mm movies and seating 680. In the 70ths the theatre is twinned and named Omnia Boulevards, before becoming an X-rated cinema in 1979. After the last transformation in 1982 into 3 screens, it’s named Arcades and shows regular movies once more, but closes only 5 years later in 1987. (The number of seats was 587: 299 + 189 + 99, not 250!/ and 3 screens instead of 1)
Located in the south of the city centre, the Delambre opened as a single screen in 1933, seating 600 with the balcony. In the first half of the 70ths, it became cinema showing X-rated films and was split up in 1977 into 3 screens (seating 260, 100 and 80). After a take-over and complete renovation in 1983 it became the little brother of the nearby 7 Parnassiens, named 3 Parnassiens. But the cinema only lasted 6 years and closed may 16, 1989.
It is now a supermarket.
The name changed to Kinepolis Bourgoin-Jaillieu in March 2016!
In 2014 the empty theatres have been transformed to auditoriums to give lessons and audio-visual presentations, by the university of Liege.
Utopolis Emmen was opened in 2005, originally designed by Kinepolis to be it’s first Dutch theatre, it was finally left to the Utopolis-chain but since kinepolis took over Utopolis in 2015 it will change it’s name to Kinepolis Emmen in the near future!All seven screens are side by side, allowing for a single projection room. There is a café & bar in the foyer.
The Utopolis-chain was taken over by the Kinepolis-group in 2015.
The Utopolis cinema group was taken over by the Kinepolis Group on july 10 2015!
The Utopolis cinema group was taken over by the Kinepolis Group on july 10 2015!
The Utopolis cinema group was taken over by the Kinepolis Group on july 10 2015!
The Utopolis cinema group was taken over by the Kinepolis Group on july 10 2015!
Correction, at the end in 2008 there were 6 screens!
Since 2014 part of the Kinepolis Group from Belgium, that took over the complete Wolff theatres group!
Became a 2 screen drive-inn! Screens are back-to-back.
The Vendome has 5 screens and not 7, as can be seen above the entrance doors: 5 salles. The first 3 of the former Le Roy cinema are the main screen + 2 extra screens on the former Balcony. 2 additional screens were created by opening up the back wall of the adjoining closed down L'Empire on the Chaussee d'Ixelles. The screens and projection booth were inversed, thus allowing the ground floor to become a supermarket that uses the former entrance.
Closed!
Closed and demolished!
Changed name to Kinepolis Antwerpen in 2013 and now 8092 seats!
Closed and now ING Bank