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Golden Screen Cinemas Sdn Bhd (GSC) is Malaysia's largest cinema exhibitor and a wholly-owned subsidiary of PPB Group Berhad (a member of the Kuok Group), which is an exhibitor and distributor of movies and content in Malaysia. It operates over 600 screens in 70 locations across Malaysia and Vietnam, with 504 screens in 55 locations in Malaysia ...
Pages in category "Former cinemas and movie theaters in Los Angeles" The following 45 pages are in this category, out of 45 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The series was the brainchild of John Wyatt, a set designer [8] then in his mid-twenties. [9] A student of influential film lecturer Jim Hosney at the Crossroads School in Santa Monica, California, [10] Wyatt initially formed an Italian cinema club with friend Richard Petit, of which Cinespia is a natural evolution. [2]
Laemmle Theatres (/ ˈ l ɛ m l i / LEM-lee) is a Los Angeles-based arthouse movie theater chain owned and operated by Robert Laemmle and his son Greg. The company's first theater, bought in 1938 [1] by Robert's father Max and uncle Kurt, both cousins of Universal Pictures founder Carl Laemmle, was located in Highland Park.
In July 2021, director Quentin Tarantino revealed that he had purchased the theater. [9] The Vista is officially reopened on November 17, 2023. [10] Shortly afterward, the theater began operating a cafe (Pam's Coffy, named for Pam Grier) and a micro-cinema (the Video Archives Cinema Club, named for Video Archives), and offering beer and wine. [11]
The first film shown at the Warner Cinerama was This is Cinerama, which grossed $3,845,200 ($45 million in 2024) in its first 115 weeks, a Los Angeles record. The film closed 133 weeks after it opened and on November 15, 1955, Cinerama Holiday opened, playing for 81 weeks and grossing $2,212,600 ($25.6 million in 2024).
The theater's purchase price was reported to be $14.4 million ($17.5 million in 2024), and the renovations, which included a seismic retrofit, totalled more than $70 million ($85 million in 2024). [21] In August 2023, the Los Angeles Times reported that Netflix had restored the theater to its original appearance. [5]
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