Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
York Square Cinema (1970-2005) is a former art house cinema located in Downtown New Haven, Connecticut, USA. The York Square was built in 1970. It housed three separate movie theaters in a renovation that connected several old buildings. The York Square Cinemas was a business partnership between Leonard Sampson and Robert Spodick.
Heaven Can Wait at the TCM Movie Database; Heaven Can Wait at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films; Heaven Can Wait at Rotten Tomatoes; Heaven Can Wait at Box Office Mojo; Heaven Can Wait: The Simple Act of Living an essay by William Paul at the Criterion Collection; Bowman, James. Diary of June 29, 2011 introductory address on the film; Streaming ...
The Criterion Channel, the year-old streaming service, is a hotbed of cinephilia in the best of times. Whereas other streamers supply expansive oceans of “content,” the Criterion Channel pools ...
Re-release; The Criterion Collection handled Blu-ray releases May 14, 2021: The Killing of Two Lovers: Nominated—Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award: May 21, 2021: New Order: Venice Film Festival Grand Jury Prize: July 16, 2021: Pig: Nominated—Gotham Independent Film Award for Best Feature: July 23, 2021: Ailey: September 3, 2021: The ...
The Lincoln Theatre, also known as Little Theatre on Lincoln Street, is a historic performance space at 1 Lincoln Street in New Haven, Connecticut. Built in 1924, it is the only known survivor in the state of the Little Theatre Movement of 1911-1933. [2] The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984. [1]
The company then moved into the Criterion Center in Times Square, a two-auditorium complex. Roundabout used the larger Stage Right space as a small Tony Award -eligible theater while the smaller second theater became the first version of the Laura Pels Theatre.
Originally opened in 1914 by The Shubert Organization, it was designed by Albert Swazey, a New York architect and built by the H.E. Murdock Construction Company. The theater struggled financially in the 1970's and closed in 1976. The theater building was subsequently acquired by the City of New Haven, and the interior was restored.
FilmStruck was a film streaming service from Turner Classic Movies which catered to cinephiles and focused on rare, classic, foreign, arthouse, and independent cinema. It launched in November 2016 and succeeded Hulu as the exclusive online streaming home of The Criterion Collection.