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The Quad Cinema is New York City 's first small four-screen multiplex theater. Located at 34 West 13th Street in Greenwich Village, it was opened by entrepreneur Maurice Kanbar, along with his younger brother Elliott S. Kanbar in October 1972. It has been described as "one of the oldest independent cinemas in the city" and "a vibrant center for ...
City Cinemas Beekman Theatre [5] Fine Arts Theatre. Lincoln Plaza Cinemas. Landmark Sunshine Cinema. Thalia Theatre. Tribeca Cinemas. Ziegfeld Theatre (1969) The Landmark at 57 West. Theater 80 at St Marks Place [Film Geek, 2023, Documentary, Dir. Richard Shepard]
[6] [7] The film was shown at the Quad Cinema in Manhattan. [7] The New York Times suggested the documentary lacked "an objective voice," as Bass was the one directing and producing a film showcasing her goodwill. [6]
Paris Theater (Manhattan) The Paris Theater is a 535-seat single-screen art house movie theater, located in Manhattan in New York City. [1] It opened on September 13, 1948. It often showed art films and foreign films in their original languages. Upon the 2016 closure of the Ziegfeld, the Paris became Manhattan's sole-surviving single-screen cinema.
Architect. Raymond Hood. The Bleecker Street Cinema was an art house movie theater located at 144 Bleecker Street in Manhattan, New York City, New York. It became a landmark of Greenwich Village and an influential venue for filmmakers and cinephiles through its screenings of foreign and independent films. It closed in 1990, reopened as a gay ...
This elder millennial started to see the trash on the street very differently around the same time that stooping accounts became popular after publications like The New York Times, Vogue, and The ...
Box office. $552.6 million [1] The Day After Tomorrow is a 2004 American science fiction disaster film [2] conceived, co-written, co-produced, and directed by Roland Emmerich, based on the 1999 book The Coming Global Superstorm by Art Bell and Whitley Strieber, and starring Dennis Quaid, Jake Gyllenhaal, Sela Ward, Emmy Rossum, and Ian Holm.
The exterior of the theater in 2019. The Film Forum is a nonprofit movie theater at 209 West Houston Street in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, New York City. It is a four-screen cinema open 365 days a year, with 280,000 annual admissions, nearly 500 seats, 60 employees, 4,500 members, and an operating budget of $5 million.