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Washington Merry-Go-Round: James Cruze: 1943: Watch on the Rhine: Herman Shumlin: 2009: Watchmen: Zack Snyder: 2005: Wedding Crashers: David Dobkin: Main Setting [3] 1973: The Werewolf of Washington: Milton Moses Ginsberg: 1964: What a Way to Go! J. Lee Thompson: 1951: When Worlds Collide: Rudolph Maté: 2013: White House Down: Roland Emmerich ...
This list of theaters and entertainment venues in Washington, D.C. includes present-day opera houses and theaters, cabarets, music halls and other places of live entertainment in Washington, D.C. Current theaters
Demolished theatres in Washington, D.C. (3 P) Pages in category "Cinemas and movie theaters in Washington, D.C." The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.
Capital One Arena is an indoor arena in Washington, D.C. Located in the Chinatown section of the larger Penn Quarter neighborhood, the arena sits atop the Gallery Place rapid transit station of the Washington Metro.
The theater, located on "Washington's Black Broadway", served the city's African American community when segregation kept them out of other venues. The Lincoln Theatre included a movie house and ballroom, and hosted jazz and big band performers such as Duke Ellington. The theater closed after the 1968 race-related riots. It was restored and ...
Verbinski and Haythe also state that the movie took visual and tonal inspiration from Silent era expressionist films and Universal Classic Monsters films, as well as the films Re-Animator (1985), Hellraiser (1987), Jacob's Ladder (1990), and Shutter Island (2010), the works of H.P. Lovecraft (namely The Dunwich Horror), and filmmaker Guillermo ...
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The Avalon Theatre, formerly Chevy Chase Theatre, is an historic structure located in the Chevy Chase neighborhood in the Northwest Quadrant of Washington, D.C. The Classical Revival building was designed by the architectural firm of Upman and Adams and completed in 1922.