
AMC Orange Mall 6
2320 N. Tustin Avenue,
Orange,
CA
92865
2320 N. Tustin Avenue,
Orange,
CA
92865
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Sad news folks!
The Mall of Orange aka the Villages at Orange closed permanently 1/31/24! đ„șđ„ș
âIcemanâ starring Timothy Hutton & âFriday the 13th: The Final Chapterâ both opened at the Orange Mall 6 40 years ago today (April 13, 1984).
Forgot about The Final Countdown & Raise the Titanic.
Grand opening ad posted.
Frequented this theater throughout the â70s & early â80s, usually after Saturday trips to the mall & nearby Kmart. There was a McDonaldâs & Del Taco across the street where we usually got lunch before the flick. Can remember seeing quite a few Disney flicks here, along with Hooper, The Muppet Movie, Time Bandits, Supergirl and Iceman (1984). Want to say the last thing I saw here was Forget Paris with Billy Crystal when it was a bargain theater.
My friends and I used to hang out at this theatre. Also, used to go to âThe Rocky Horror Picture Showâ when it was shown there.
I still remember the first movie I saw at this theater when I moved to the area back in 1984âŠ. Night of the Comet.
I had the nonor of being the closing House manager when the little closed. I actually got to open the Marina Pacifica 12 and close the Orange Mall 6 within a 3 month period..good times. I remember a crew from Florida carving up the theater and taking the seats and equipment to South America. The lobby had a huge hole in the floor and some guy walked thru this incredible mess and asked the memorable question. âWhat time is the first show of "Evita?â
This is from Boxoffice magazine in August 1971:
ORANGE, CALIF.-Construction got underway in early August on American Multi Cinemaâs first sixplex in California, the Mall of Orange, on Tustin Avenue at Heim in Orange. The fourth AMC multi-theater in California, the Mall of Orange will have three 300-seat auditoriums, two 196-seat auditoriums and one 293-seat auditorium. American Multi Cinemas has scheduled a December 22 opening date for the entertainment complex.
I have great memories of seeing movie here when I was a kid, including âHot Lead and Cold Feetâ with Don Knotts, âHooperâ with Burt Reynolds, and âSuperman II."
As a teen I got to see lots of great horror movies here such as "A Nightmare On Elm Street,â âDawn of the Dead,â âThe Evil Dead,â and âFriday the 13th The Final Chapter.â
Also, Midnite Movies were a big deal at the AMC Orange Mall 6 Theaters, showing stuff regularly on Saturday nights like âRocky Horror,â âEraserhead,â and âThe Song Remains the Same.â Good times!
AMC ran the theatre as a relatively successful discount house in itâs later years. Itâs closing coresponded not only with the mallâs redevelopment, but also with AMCâs expansion of their Fullerton venue. The staff and management were offered positions at the Fullerton 20 (expansion opened a couple of weeks after the Orange Mall 6 closing), but only one individual accepted the offer.
That title sounds more like a porno than a Burt Reynolds film.
The double feature on the right was advertised as showing at the Orange Mall 6 in October 1973:
http://snipurl.com/205zn
This theatre was dreadful and typical of AMCâs 1970s fare. Tiny screens, tiny auditoriums, mostly mono sound, picture slide ads and terrible presentation. The seats were pretty uncomfortable. AMC spent very little time to design this theatre, and very little money to build it and it showed. It had no curtains over the screen, unlike the much more luxurious Cinedome on Chapman Avenue (also demolished). The staff, as I recall, seemed like they wanted to be somewhere else.
Itâs hard to believe that AMC built so many of these similar theatres in the Southern California market and thrived with such mediocrity. Iâm not sure if AMC pioneered the idea of slide show ads prior to a movie presentation, but even as a kid, I found these obtrusive to the movie experience.
It wasnât until around 1987 that AMC took some planning, time and money and built some nicer theatres like the MainPlace and Century City 14.
The La Habra theatre, as I recall, was just as dreadful as the Orange Mall 6. There was another one in, I believe, Cerritos or Norwalk called the Alondra 6. I was a kid when these theatres were doing some good business (since they were usually very small, it was easy to pack the auditoriums on a Saturday night). At least in the case of Orange, there were two great alternatives in the Cinedome and City Center.
Still, the âol Orange Mall 6 held some fond memories for me being a kid growing up in nearby Anaheim Hills. Since it was close and very inexpensive, most of our parents could drop us off there during a Saturday matinee. The theatre used to run some second run or return engagements of recent films like âStar Warsâ and âAirplane,â and used to run most of the Disney releases/re-releases.
One of my friends hadnât seen âStar Warsâ yet, so he and I went to see it at Orange Mall 6 in 1979. He wasnât impressed by the movie! Come to think of it, it didnât have the same feeling as it did when I saw it at the Orange City Center Theatre. Bingo! We were watching âStar Warsâ in a tiny, cramped theatre in 35mm mono sound. When I saw it in 1977, it was shown in 70mm Six Track Dolby Stereo. Talk about a difference in how one experiences a movie.
I saw a lot of the Disney re-issues here. And I think the first Dolby Stereo presentation I saw there was âThe Karate Kid.â I recall being excited that this theatre finally had stereo sound. Iâm not quite sure when AMC installed Dolby Stereo, but even after âKarate Kid,â they didnât seem to run a lot of films in the format. By that time, I was going to the Cinedome much more often anyway.
Indeed, when the Orange Mall finally got renovated a few years ago, the Broadway dept. store was demolished, as was the Orange Mall 6.
If my memory serves me correctly, this theatre and the old Broadway department store were torn down for the construction of the Wal-Mart now at the mall.