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The 13th ÉCU - The European Independent Film Festival took place from May 4–6 at Cinema Les 7 Parnassiens in Paris. 81 films from 37 countries were screened during the 3-day festival. During the festival weekend, international audiences were exposed to film and their filmmakers from across a spectrum of experiences, cultures, and genres.
Opened in 1934 as the Lux Rennes, the cinema was situated in the building of its patron, the Compagnie parisienne d'électricité. The art-deco, air-conditioned 500-seat theatre, with 12-metre screen and adjacent bar, was somewhat luxurious for the period. [1]: 50 In 1962 Jacques Tati acquired the cinema and renamed it L'Arlequin. In 1978 it ...
In 1925, actors Armand Tallier and Laurence Myrga choose the small rue des Ursulines to establish a cinema to specialize in avant-garde films and catered to art house audiences. Thus, the first avant-garde cinema in France was born, a precursor to the now established system of "Art et Essai." The cinema opened January 21, 1926.
Paris’ Pathé Palace, a Cinema Designed by Renzo Piano, Lends Unifrance Rendez-Vous a Taste of French Luxury. Ben Croll. January 13, 2025 at 8:51 AM.
Out of Paris, in some cities like Nantes, Bordeaux or Lyon, a part of this diversified programming does exist, but mostly UGC cinemas are like Pathé and Gaumont cinemas. Its competitors include Pathé Cinémas, Cinéville, CGR and Kinepolis Group.
The cinema-theater closed down in june 2009 and re-opened in September 2010 with a new associative structure and Raphaël Vion as director. It was renamed La Clef - L’Usage du monde , based on Nicolas Bouvier’s book “ The Way of the World ” and kept the goal of presenting world cinema .
Cinema 1, 2 & 3 by Angelika; Cinéma Village; DCTV Cinema [1] [2] Film Forum; Film Society of Lincoln Center; The Film-Makers' Coop; French Institute Alliance Française; 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
Situated on the corner of Rue des Écoles and Rue Champollion, the single-screen cinema opened in 1938, replacing a bookshop. In 1956, a second screen opened in the basement, replacing a cabaret theatre. Called Actua-Champo, this screen was dedicated to news broadcasts and had its own entrance. A single entrance was installed in the late 1970s.