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formerly Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy and Bercy Arena Aktéon: 11, rue Général Blaise: 11th: 1986: 60: theatre (plays), concerts: Alhambra: 21, rue Yves-Toudic: 11th: 2008: 530: music hall: formerly Théâtre Art Déco des Cheminots Artistic-Athévains: 45bis, rue Richard-Lenoir: 11th: 1913: 220: theatre (plays) formerly Folies Artistic ...
The Pavillon de Paris (French pronunciation: [pavijɔ̃ d(ə) paʁi]) was a large concert space in Paris, France, located near the Porte de Pantin Métro stop, on the northern edge of the city. [1] With a seating capacity of approximately 10,000 spectators, the Pavillon was the city's largest indoor music arena throughout its brief operating ...
In June, the Gare TGV-Futuroscope (Futuroscope's TGV Station) opened with a walkway allowing visitors to reach the heart of the park directly from the station (80 mins from Paris-Montparnasse). L'Imax 3D. 2001: the inauguration of the new attractions: CyberWorld', OceanOasis, Superstition and Métropole Défi (Metropolis Challenge). On 18 April ...
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The cinema was founded in 1973 by Claude Frank-Forter, with the goal of promoting underrepresented filmmakers and of offering affordable prices. In 1981, after the cinema industry across France hit a recession, Frank-Forter sold the cinema to the Groupe Caisse d'Épargne .
The nearest Paris Métro stations to La Géode are Corentin Cariou on Line 7 and Porte de Pantin on Line 5. In 2017, Pathé Gaumont was chosen as the new operator of the cinema. [1] A refurbishment was announced, and the building closed for works to modernize its concept on 1 December 2018, with plans to reopen to the public in June 2020. [2]
Le Balzac was opened in 1935 with a screening of the film The Wedding Night, directed by King Vidor.Initially, Le Balzac specialized in major Hollywood productions. After World War II, Le Balzac turned its focus to French cinema and helped the emergence of French directors such as René Clément and Jacques Tati, before focusing on international arthouse productions.
The movie is presented in the Palais du Cinéma (Cinema Palace) building and projected onto five adjacent screens, giving 200° coverage and resembling a Cinerama Screen, in which one giant, curved screen stretches so wide that the edges are at the peripheral vision of the average person, unlike Circle-Vision 360° found at the Canada pavilion ...