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Dubbed the “Gladiator II Popcorn AR-ena Bucket,” the Cinemark exclusive is being sold (sans popcorn) for $22.99. Comparable buckets typically cost $24.99 to $30 or more, depending on the theater.
the paddle steamer built for the 1951 version of the musical Show Boat; The unsold items, "... truckloads of costume sketches, movie stills and other memorabilia were sent to the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas to be sold in the gift shop and used as hotel decorations." [13] The auction catalogs have now themselves become sought-after collectibles.
The upcoming "Beetlejuice Beetlejuice" movie hits theaters in just a few weeks, and fans have the opportunity to score a limited-edition Beetlejuice popcorn bucket.. The sale will take place at ...
MondoCon is an annual festival held in Austin that showcases the artwork of Mondo and features exclusive collectibles, panels, and special screenings with filmmakers and artists. [32] The event has been called "the world's coolest poster convention" [ 33 ] and "the venerable kingpin of the artisanal movie poster game".
The highly anticipated movie "Alien: Romulus" is hitting theaters this week, and fans are eagerly searching for ways to win a movie-themed popcorn bucket.. Since the bucket is likely to sell out ...
Discount theaters, also known as dollar theaters, dollar movies, second-run theaters, and sub-run theaters, are movie theaters that show motion pictures for reduced prices after those films depart first-run theaters. [1] [2] Originally, they would receive release prints of 35 mm films after those prints had been shown already at first-run ...
The anonymous seller of a pistol owned by Dillinger can thank a movie that opened this month for getting such a steep price -- $95,600."Public Enemies" has made $88 million since it opened July 1, and
The magazine was started in 1911 under the name The Pictures and in 1914 it merged with Picturegoer. [1] Following the merge it was renamed Pictures and The Picturegoer, which continued until 1920. [1] The same year it was renamed as Pictures for the Picturegoer. [1] It began publication with the name Picturegoer in January 1921.