Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
UA Times Square, at Times Square; opened in December 1993, closed in February 2012; [16] the site was replaced by a Louis Vuitton store, and the UA theater was relocated to the 12th to 14th floor of the mall, renamed as CINE TIMES, [17] [18] opened in November 2013. [19] Closed in March 2021, it was succeeded by Emperor Cinemas.
The site was previously occupied by the original Sharp Street tram depot of the Hong Kong Tramways, another of the Wharf's subsidiary operations acquired in 1974.The Executive Council approved Tramways' plan to relocate its depots to Sai Wan Ho and Sai Ying Pun in July 1986, on the argument that the HK$3.5 million in operating costs savings would allow for tram fares to be held down. [4]
Hong Kong traditionally has one of the world’s highest per capita cinema attendance rates, which means that in normal years the territory usually ranks among the world’s top 20 box office ...
Hong Kong: Conrad Hotel: The Golden Peacock: Macau: The Venetian Macao: Golden Valley Hong Kong: Emperor (Happy Valley) Hotel: Guo Fu Lou Hong Kong: Empire Hotel Hong Kong: Hin Ho Curry Restaurant Hong Kong: Shau Kei Wan: Closed [33] Ho Hung Kee Hong Kong: Hysan Place: Hoi King Heen Hong Kong: Tsim Sha Tsui: Hong Zhou Hong Kong: Chinachem ...
Luk Yu (Chinese: 陸羽茶室) is a teahouse and dim sum restaurant located on Stanley Street, in the Central area of Hong Kong, established in 1933. It is currently the oldest restaurant in Hong Kong. [1] It is known for its colonial style, adherence to tradition and loyal long-time customers, for whom the entire first floor is unofficially ...
The cinema was regarded as one of the most extravagant in Hong Kong; whereas normal prime seats would cost 10 Hong Kong dollars (HKD), the cheapest seat in Palace Theatre costs 12 HKD. The 1060 larger and wider seats, the luxurious lobby, and the middle to upper class clientele signaled the birth of high-end cinemas for Hong Kong movie-goers.
Masculinities and Hong Kong Cinema. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2005. ISBN 962-209-737-5, ISBN 962-209-738-3. Stokes, Lisa Odham, Jean Lukitsh, Michael Hoover, and Tyler Stokes. Historical Dictionary of Hong Kong Cinema. Historical dictionaries of literature and the arts, no. 2. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press, 2007. ISBN 0-8108-5520-8.
Kong Chian Cinema was the first of the two cinemas opened for the Toa Payoh HDB estate since 1972, the other one being the Toa Payoh Theatre.. The 1,500 seat cinema was designed by the architect Hor Cheok Foon, it was built and handled by Chiew Kong Chian Association, a Kuala Lumpur-based company, as part of the Toa Payoh development plan initiated by HDB. [1]