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Frank Zappa and the Mothers of Invention played here nightly for 6 months in 1967. [10] Faced with a lack of venues in his native Los Angeles, Frank Zappa booked a series of shows at downtown New York's Balloon Farm in November 1966 then returned to play at the Garrick, the narrow, 199 seat, performance space/cinema above the Cafe Au Go Go.
Filmmaker and social activist Lionel Rogosin founded the 200-seat Bleecker Street Cinema in 1960 in order to exhibit his controversial 1959 film Come Back, Africa. [3] [4] In the early 1960s, the independent-filmmakers' group The Film-Makers' Cooperative, of which Rogosin was a supporter, showed experimental movies there as midnight screenings. [5]
Similar to spy films, the heist or caper film included worldly settings and hi-tech gadgets, as in the original Ocean's Eleven (1960), Topkapi (1964) or The Thomas Crown Affair (1968). The spaghetti westerns (made in Italy and Spain), were typified by Clint Eastwood films, such as For a Few Dollars More (1965) or The Good, the Bad and the Ugly ...
This is a list of films which placed number one at the weekly box office in the United States during 1960 per Variety's weekly National Boxoffice Survey. The results are based on a sample of 20-25 key cities and therefore, any box office amounts quoted may not be the total that the film grossed nationally in the week.
Cinema 1, 2 & 3 by Angelika; Cinéma Village; DCTV Cinema [1] [2] Film Forum; Film Society of Lincoln Center; The Film-Makers' Coop; L'Alliance New York; IFC Center; Japan Society; Metrograph; Museum of Modern Art; The Paris Theater, now leased by Netflix [3] Quad Cinema; Roxy Cinema [4] Village East by Angelika
Title Director Cast Genre/Note The 3rd Voice: Hubert Cornfield: Edmond O'Brien, Laraine Day, Julie London: Mystery: 20th Century Fox: 12 to the Moon: David Bradley: Ken Clark, Tom Conway, Michi Kobi
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Belmont [41]-Open as early as 1926, [42] demolished 1970s; Bruin [43]-Opened 1937, currently first run, and operated by Regency Theatres; Figueroa [44]-Opened 1925, closed/demolished late 1960s, site now occupied by a Broadway Federal Bank [45] Florence [46]-Opened 1932, closed around 1965, demolished around 1968, site now occupied by a Rite ...