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Fido; The Hillclimb; The Legend of Simon Conjurer; Mee-Shee: The Water Giant; The Projectionist; Say Yes & Marry Me; The Scarecrow and The Rainbow Kid; A Sister's Nightmare
The Royal Theatre is a proscenium arch theatre and concert hall located in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. It was designed in 1912 by William D'Oyly Hamilton Rochfort and Eben W. Sankey. Rochfort was very active as an architect in Victoria from 1908 until he left for the war in 1914.
The 12 Disasters of Christmas (2012 TV movie) 3000 Miles to Graceland (2001) A Fool and His Honey (2017) Backcountry (2014) Behemoth (2011 TV movie) Best. Trip. Ever. (2010 TV movie) Beyond Gravity (2000) Big Nothing (2006) The Big Year (2011) Bloodsuckers (2005 TV movie) Chaos Theory (2008) Coming Home for Christmas (2013 video) A Dangerous ...
The McPherson Playhouse, known as The Mac, is a theatre and concert hall in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.Part of the Centennial Square complex on the north side of downtown Victoria, adjacent to the intersection of Pandora and Government streets across from the CTV Vancouver Island studios and the Victoria City Hall, it was originally built as a Pantages Theatre in 1914.
Title Director Cast Notes Ref 6 Minutes per Kilometre (6 minutes/km) Catherine Boivin [1]299 Queen Street West: Sean Menard: Documentary about the early years of MuchMusic [2] ...
Filming took place throughout Alberta and British Columbia, Canada.Nathan's farm was previously featured in the 1978 film Superman: The Movie. [1]The Portland street scenes including a period street-car were filmed in Victoria, B.C. where the pavement of a long block of Johnson Street was covered with dirt and rails were installed to replicate Portland of the era.
The construction of the Chan Centre took 2 years to complete and the official opening occurred on May 11, 1997. The cost came to approximately $25 million with donations from the Chan Foundation of Canada, BC Tel (now Telus), the Royal Bank of Canada, and the Provincial Government of British Columbia.
The Stanley first opened as a movie theatre in December 1930 and showed movies for over sixty years before falling revenues led to its closure in 1991. After years of threatened commercial redevelopment, the Stanley was renovated as a stage theatre between 1997 and 1998 and subsequently awarded status as a heritage building.