Broward Mall 4

8010 West Broward Boulevard,
Plantation, FL 33324

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BenPaz
BenPaz on March 5, 2017 at 10:28 pm

rivest how do you find so many pictures of theater grand opening ads. they’re cool and i’m just wondering.

rivest266
rivest266 on March 5, 2017 at 7:11 pm

This opened on August 15th, 1980. Grand opening ad in the photo section.

Mikeoaklandpark
Mikeoaklandpark on April 8, 2013 at 3:35 pm

If I am not mistaken this theater was last run by United Artists.

Dorg
Dorg on April 6, 2013 at 7:24 pm

Just came across this article as it pertains to this thread. A 12 screen theater is coming to the Broward Mall (now Westfield), called the Regal Cinemas Broward Stadium 12.

http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2013-02-28/business/fl-cinema-westfield-broward-tophat-20130228_1_movie-theater-westfield-broward-state-of-the-art-sound-and-projection

It will supposedly be located somewhere between Macy’s and JC Penneys.

sporridge
sporridge on February 4, 2010 at 11:03 pm

Broward Mall 4’s 1980 opening coincided with the debut of “Caddyshack” on two screens — of tremendous neighborhood interest due to filming at nearby Rolling Hills Country Club, among other South Florida shooting locations. Throughout the 80s, occasional specialty bookings (often coinciding with or following runs at GCC’s Riviera in Coral Gables) drew audiences from Broward County’s furthest corners, including exclusive engagements of “Blood Simple,” “Das Boot,” and “Sid and Nancy.”

When GCC opened the Fountains Cinema 8 around the corner in the late 80s, the Broward Mall 4 looked somewhat antiquated already (especially with the traditional GCC corrugated metal wall treatments). Possibly noting the success of independent and international films a few miles away at the then-new Fox Sunrise (later Sunrise Cinema 11), GCC renamed the old fourplex Art Cinema at Broward Mall. GCC did retain ownership (and tagged features with its jazz-riff logos) but downplayed its association in much of the marketing.

ACaBM nabbed exclusive runs of “One False Move,” “Delicatessen,” “My Own Private Idaho,” “Naked Lunch,” and other popular/acclaimed indies of the day. For every packed-housed booking, though, there were sometimes I was the only paying customer (“Golden Braid” on opening night, for instance, and a huge ad had appeared in the local press).

Shortly after I saw “Blade Runner: The Director’s Cut” there, the cinema closed. Never reused, it was eventually demolished. A short 12-year life, but home to some remarkable films.

Kieranx
Kieranx on January 30, 2009 at 8:11 pm

I went to see a few things here growing up (a sneak preview of The Breakfast Club is the most memorable, though I also recall Blood Simple, American Dreamer and Tightrope). I later got a job there in the summer of 1989 when the theater was in major flux due to GCC opening a brand new multiplex not too far away. The manager who hired me at the beginning of the summer (a real ball-buster) left to open the new place and we got a really cool younger woman who adored me and I basically had the run of the place for the summer.

I remember doing acid a few times and being assigned to the popcorn room upstairs (we popped our corn on-site, but not in the “for show” machines at the concession stand. I also remember getting to hang out in cut-offs and a t-shirt and painting the suite of offices upstairs instead of having to do trash duty in a scratchy uniform. I’d be stoned, blaring music upstairs and painting while all the 15 year olds complained.

At the beginning of the summer, we had Ghostbusters 2, Dead Poets Society, Honey I Shrunk the Kids, Renegades and Do the Right Thing, but by the time the new theater opened, we got stuck with crap like Vampire’s Kiss, Babar the Movie, Shag, The Package, Scandal and anything else they didn’t want to put in their pristine theatre. I do remember we got When Harry Met Sally for one night. I think it was a sneak preview, but we weren’t supposed to get it. I believe another theatre had a projector problem, so we got it with no advertising and people were sent over to us who showed up at the other theater.

Al Alvarez
Al Alvarez on August 13, 2008 at 3:01 pm

The address was 8010 W. Broward Boulevard. The Broward Mall 4 operated from 1980 to 1991 and was opened by General Cinema.

evmovieguy
evmovieguy on May 20, 2007 at 12:02 am

This was another fun theater that I went to alot in the 80s. I don’t remember it being there in 1978 though. That was the year the Broward Mall opened and there wasn’t much around it at the time. I seem to remember the UA Movies at Plantation opening before this theater, which was literally right down the road. I’d say Broward Mall 4 opened somewhere in the very early 80s. Perhaps ‘80, '81. Here are the flicks I remember seeing there:

Bachelor Party
Vision Quest
Tightrope
The Breakfast Club
9 ½ Weeks
Hitchcock’s Vertigo (in a theatrical re-release)
E.T. ( thought it was a sappy film then and still do)
Unfaithfully Yours w/Dudley Moore (it wasn’t a critical or box office hit but I remember laughing my ass off. I thought it was so frickin funny that I convinced my sister to go see it with me a second time. As I recall she didn’t think it was nearly as funny as I did.)o

I probably saw other films there that I can’t remember off-hand, but two others that I saw there that stand out were the theatrical re-release of Blazing Saddles and the first run of Prince’s Purple Rain.
The night I went to see Blazing Saddles the theater was packed and was in complete stiches all during the film. Uproarious laughter the whole time. I had never seen the film before that, and it had me cracking up pretty hard as well.

Purple Rain was interesting because it was the first time I think I had seen a movie conceived by and starring a current Rock/Pop star that was specifically geared to my age group. The teens of the 80s really didn’t have their own version of something like ‘A Hard Day’s Night’, so when Purple Rain came along it seemed to validate or galvinize whatever was happening as far as the music and the attitudes of alot of the kids then. MTV sort of did that for the first year or two that it was on, but actually having a ‘rock and roll’ film with uncensored material in it brought up a slightly a notch or two. Prince was a huge star but he was also unique enough to appeal to one’s underground tastes, so if you liked this movie then you didn’t feel like a ‘sell-out’. Sounds silly now but it was pretty important then…