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Opening Title Director Cast Genre Ref J A N U A R Y 21: The Moogai: Jon Bell Shari Sebbens, Meyne Wyatt, Tessa Rose, Clarence Ryan, Toby Leonard Moore, Bella Heathcote: Horror [1]F E B
The cinema opened with a party that was attended by 700 guests who viewed a screening of the film The Living Sea. [4] [5] In 2012, a new 29.7m x 35.7m screen was installed at a cost of $250,000. [6] On 25 September 2016, the cinema was demolished in order to make way for a new complex called The Ribbon that was planned to open in 2019. [7]
The Village Orange drive-in opened on 8 October 1970 but closed in the early 1980s. From then until 2018 when it was demolished, it was used for various types of open-air markets. In Thurgoona in Albury, the Stargazer drive-in opened in October 1972. It closed in December 1990. The Sturt drive-in in Wagga Wagga opened in February 1959.
Australia's first cinema, the Salon Lumière at 237 Pitt Street, Sydney, was operating in October 1896, and showed the first Australian-produced short film on 27 October 1896. [5] The Athenaeum Hall in Collins Street, Melbourne, operated as a dance hall from the 1880s, and from time to time would provide alternative entertainment to patrons.
Palace Cinemas is an Australian cinema chain that specialises in arthouse and international films.. Their head office are based in the Melbourne suburb of South Yarra and they operate locations in New South Wales (Central Park, [1] Norton Street, Byron Bay, Ballina [2] & Oxford St), [3] Victoria (Coburg, Brighton Bay, Northcote, Balwyn, Brighton, South Yarra, Melbourne, Moonee Ponds & The ...
The Bondi Beach Cultural Landscape is a heritage-listed former Turkish baths, pavilion with dressing cubicles, dining rooms, sunbaking, shops and ballroom and now art gallery, pavilion, theatre and open air cinema located at Queen Elizabeth Drive, Bondi Beach, Sydney, Australia. The pavilion was designed by Robertson and Marks, with Leith C ...
Sydney : Currency Press, 1991. ISBN 0-86819-292-9. Moran, Albert and Errol Vieth. Historical Dictionary of Australian and New Zealand Cinema. Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press, 2005. ISBN 0-8108-5459-7; O'Regan, Tom. Australian National Cinema. London: Routledge, 1996. Reade, Eric. Australian Silent Films: A Pictorial History of Silent Films from ...
The 13th Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts Awards (generally known as the AACTA Awards) is an awards ceremony to celebrate the best Australian films and television of 2023. The main ceremony took place on 10 February 2024 at the Home of the Arts on the Gold Coast and was broadcast on Network 10 and Arena .