Photos favorited by Ryan Serowinski

  • <p>Original August 10, 1984 grand opening ad.</p>
  • <p>December 9th, 1997 improved image</p>
  • <p>August 10th, 1984</p>
  • <p>Newspaper add for the last showing for the Westown Theatre on June 28,1990</p>
  • <p>June 27th, 1990</p>
  • <p>Final movies shown on October 31, 2019</p>
  • <p>This pic is of the RKO Stanley Warner’s Boyd’s Cinerama marquee, shortly after having the “Sam Eric” covering removed.  Above it is the Sameric 4 vertical marquee, where in 1928, the vertical “Boyd” sign was</p>
  • <p>early 1970s!</p>
  • <p>Demolished younger sibling of the first Syosset Theater. Now there are zero.</p>
  • <p>December 19, 1997</p>
  • <p>November 5, 1982</p>
  • <p>March 13, 1981</p>
  • <p>May 2, 1980</p>
  • <p>October 28, 1977</p>
  • <p>April 8, 1953</p>
  • <p>December 31, 1982</p>
  • <p>This is what is used to look like, when I was little in 2002.</p>
  • <p>The Philadelphia Mills (then known as Franklin Mills) 14, when it was originally by General Cinema, before AMC took over</p>
  • <p>May 19th, 1989</p>
  • <p>The entry to theater 20</p>
  • <p>It was taken before I saw Ralph Breaks the Internet.</p>
  • <p>This is auditorium 11, it was transformed into an XD theater in late-Winter 2010</p>
  • <p>7/25/20 pandemic schedule, photo via Tim O'Neill.</p>
  • <p>It wasn’t certain what the name of the UA Plaza would be. Drawn in early concepts as the UA Cinema Center, a name used successfully in California, the chain would go after General Cinema’s neighboring NorthPark III&IV with the name UA NorthPark. There was backroom fighting about that and the UA would open May 24, 1989 as the UA Plaza as shown in the final touches of the theater’s building here.</p>
  • <p>12/10/93 advertisement announcing the Town and Country re-opening as a $1 house.</p>