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IMAX Melbourne is an IMAX movie theatre in Carlton, Melbourne, Australia. It is the largest IMAX theatre in the Southern Hemisphere and the second largest in the world by screen size and capacity. [1] [2] [3] [a] It is owned and operated by Museums Victoria and is located eight-storeys beneath the Melbourne Museum.
The cinema operated throughout World War II and the post-war era, mostly showing big-name American films from the major studios such as MGM, Paramount and United Artists. [4] In 1969, the Astor was bought by Tanda Investments and became one of 12 cinemas in Melbourne that played only Greek language films.
Victoria Gardens is a shopping centre located in Richmond, Victoria, Australia approximately 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) east of Melbourne's central business district.It is located on the corner of Victoria and Burnley Streets, Richmond at the eastern end of the Richmond commercial, retail and residential precinct.
The Carlton Gardens is a UNESCO World Heritage Site located on the northeastern edge of the Central Business District in the suburb of Carlton, in Melbourne, Australia. A popular picnic and barbecue area, the heritage-listed Carlton Gardens are home to an array of wildlife, including brushtail possums .
Many of the films shown were from the State Film Centre of Victoria (later known as ACMI), and during the 1960s MUFS screened at various locations around Melbourne, including Union Theatre, Carlton Moviehouse, and later Glasshouse Cinema in RMIT University during the 1980s, [3] and finally relocated to ACMI in 2002. [1]
Melbourne Recital Centre [16] Federation Hall 234 St Kilda Road 221 live music, cinema Part of the Victorian College of the Arts [18] Playhouse: 100 St Kilda Road: 1984: 884: theatre: Part of the Theatres Building of the Arts Centre Melbourne [19] Sidney Myer Music Bowl: Kings Domain, St Kilda Road: 1959: 2,030: live music
Beginning with Mary and Max, which toured regional Victoria, [124] ACMI then followed by showing the 2011 Best of the Independent Games Festival [125] in Sydney and Brisbane; Shaun Tan's The Lost Thing: From Book To Film [126] and War Pictures: Australians at the Cinema 1914–1918; [127] and ACMI's first original exhibition in the Melbourne ...
The Palace Theatre (also known as The Palace) was an entertainment venue located in Melbourne, Australia. First built for live theatre in 1912, it was also used as a cinema and for live music. It was demolished except for its facade in 2020 after much community opposition, to be replaced by a hotel. [1]