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UPDATE: “The Brutalist” is coming to Imax. Tickets for early-access screenings in New York and Los Angeles on Dec. 18 are available for purchase. The film will then expand to Imax screens ...
The structure was designed by movie theater architect, S. Charles Lee, with a Streamline Moderne marquee, and opened in 1937. It is named after the UCLA mascot Joe Bruin. The theater was often used for private events, such as film and television show premieres. [5] It was designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument (HCM #361) in 1988 ...
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]
The ArcLight chain opened in 2002 as a single theater, the ArcLight Hollywood in Hollywood, Los Angeles, and later expanded to eleven locations in California, Massachusetts, Maryland, and Illinois. The chain has been credited for pioneering features such as assigned seating, reclining chairs, and in-house bars and restaurants that were later ...
The theater's purchase price was reported to be $14.4 million ($17 million in 2023), and the renovations, which included a seismic retrofit, totalled more than $70 million ($82.4 million in 2023). [21] In August 2023, the Los Angeles Times reported that Netflix had restored the theater to its original appearance. [5]
On January 25, 1988, Columbia agreed to acquire USA Cinemas Inc., with 325 screens, for $165 million; the acquisition was closed on March 2. [9] Later in 1988, Loews bought 48 screens in the Washington, D.C. area from Roth Enterprises, M&R Theatres with 70 screens in the Chicago area, and JF Theatres, Inc. with 66 screens in the Baltimore area.
Cinefamily programming included a range of films, from early silents to contemporary features, [13] live comedy, live music, found footage, mixed media and other special events, and extended form post-screening Q&As. [11] They mounted original retrospectives on filmmakers Jim Henson, Jerry Lewis, [14] John Cassavetes, [15] and Andrzej Zulawski [16] and commissioned live film scores by ...
The Emoji Movie premiere, Westwood Village. The Regency Village Theatre (formerly the Fox Theatre, Westwood Village or the Fox Village Theatre) is a historic, landmark cinema in Westwood, Los Angeles, California in the heart of the Mediterranean-themed shopping and cinema precinct, opposite the Fox Bruin Theater, near the University of California, Los Angeles ().