1949 Italian film “Cielo sulla palude,” also known as “Heaven Over the Marshes,” was directed by Augusto Genina and photographed by the great G.R. Aldo who did Visconti’s “La Terra Trema.”
1949 Italian film “Cielo sulla palude,” also known as “Heaven Over the Marshes,” directed by Augusto Genina a photographed by the great G.R. Aldo who did Visconti’s “La Terra Trema.”
Google Maps shows that the location now houses the Atlantic Sports Bar and Restaurant and Gillett’s Mixed Martial Arts Academy in a single new building. All signs of the former drive-in seem to have disappeared.
“The Iron Crown” is still around today. It has been shown by TCM and Martin Scorsese admires the film very much. “La donna e' mobile,” on the other hand, probably survives only in an Italian archive or may even be lost.
A 1931 Italian film by Jack Salvatori.
“The Captives” was a 1969 Danish film, released in the U.S. in 1970, for clarification. Don’t know what “Pussycat Gang” was.
1949 Italian film “Cielo sulla palude,” also known as “Heaven Over the Marshes,” was directed by Augusto Genina and photographed by the great G.R. Aldo who did Visconti’s “La Terra Trema.”
“Es war eine rauschende Ballnacht,” 1939, directed by Carl Froelich, with Zarah Leander and Leo Slezak. NOT in color.
German biopic on the Russian composer.
“Il Cristo Proibito.”
Previous name: Palmer Theatre.
Film on marquee: the 1938 “Letter of Introduction” with Adolphe Menjou.
1930?
Original title: “Odna.”
Max Ophuls film.
Russian film.
My favorite film of all time.
Ad in The Daily Worker.
Ad in The Daily Worker.
1949 Italian film “Cielo sulla palude,” also known as “Heaven Over the Marshes,” directed by Augusto Genina a photographed by the great G.R. Aldo who did Visconti’s “La Terra Trema.”
The Royal Theatre first opened on Tuesday, October 27, 1914, per a notice in The Olneyville Times.
Google Maps shows that the location now houses the Atlantic Sports Bar and Restaurant and Gillett’s Mixed Martial Arts Academy in a single new building. All signs of the former drive-in seem to have disappeared.
“The Iron Crown” is still around today. It has been shown by TCM and Martin Scorsese admires the film very much. “La donna e' mobile,” on the other hand, probably survives only in an Italian archive or may even be lost.
A 1940 film, “One Night in the Tropics.”
A 1940 film.
Spanish-language films were regularly shown here, I believe.
Must be 1975.
…and Harold Lloyd too!
Both films on the marquee were from 1938.