Well it’s good to know you didn’t have to reserve seats at this drive-in.
I guess as opposed to others. Not many Drive-ins showed films in Super Panavision 70.
I went to see it at a drive-in with my family in our station wagon that summer of ‘66. Children under 12 free.
Ad merely credits “My Fair Lady” as being photographed in Super Panavision 70, but that doesn’t mean that the theatre was using a 70mm
print. There was a 35mm version of Super Panavision 70 using an anamorphic lens.
I was joking. They just took an ad for general theaters after the film went wide. Though special prices was usually ‘Now at popular prices!’
Remember popular prices for all sorts of entertainments? It was often used. Now it is never used.
Comments (3)
Well it’s good to know you didn’t have to reserve seats at this drive-in. I guess as opposed to others. Not many Drive-ins showed films in Super Panavision 70.
I went to see it at a drive-in with my family in our station wagon that summer of ‘66. Children under 12 free.
Ad merely credits “My Fair Lady” as being photographed in Super Panavision 70, but that doesn’t mean that the theatre was using a 70mm print. There was a 35mm version of Super Panavision 70 using an anamorphic lens.
I was joking. They just took an ad for general theaters after the film went wide. Though special prices was usually ‘Now at popular prices!’ Remember popular prices for all sorts of entertainments? It was often used. Now it is never used.