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The arrival of television was a disruptive force for Edmonton's cinemas. [22] The theatre was forced to close in 1958, [ 34 ] and the McKernan family sold the Princess Block soon after. [ 22 ] The Princess's last advertisement ran on July 19, 1958 advertising a double bill, Away All Boats and Day of Fury . [ 33 ]
Dundrum Village Centre opened in 1971 under the name Dundrum Shopping Centre. It was one of the first purpose-built shopping centres in Ireland. It was renamed "Dundrum Village Centre" after the opening of the large multi-building retail complex known as Dundrum Town Centre, [2] [3] and, controlled by the same parties as that centre, its redevelopment was originally planned as "phase 2" of the ...
The theatre was twinned in 1972 and renamed as Westmount Cinemas. [7] The theatre moved inside the mall with the opening of the four-screen Famous Players theatre on November 8, 1985. [8] In 2005, Cineplex Galaxy sold the theatre to Empire Theatres before it finally closed on February 27, 2011. [9]
Dundrum Town Centre is a shopping centre located in Dundrum, Dublin, Ireland.It is one of Ireland's two largest [1] shopping centres with over 131 shops, 47 restaurants, 3 amusement facilities and a cinema, retail floor space of 111,484 m 2 (1,200,000 sq ft) [1] and almost 140,000 m 2 (1,500,000 sq ft) total floor space, [2] and over 3,000 car parking spaces. [3]
On October 29, 2013, Empire Theatres closed and reopened as Landmark Cinemas on October 31, 2013. On November 18, 2015, Edmonton City Centre announced that it planned to relocate and significantly upgrade its food court as part of a $41.3-million redevelopment investment that would revitalize the entire retail experience of the downtown ...
Magic Lantern Theatres was founded in 1984 in Edmonton, Alberta, while Rainbow Cinemas was founded in the early 1990s in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The two chains merged and are now based in Edmonton. In May 2016, a strategic decision was made to sell all of the Ontario cinemas to Imagine Cinemas, except for the Cobourg location.
Metro Cinema in 2011. Metro Cinema Edmonton is an independent cinema and non-profit organization in Edmonton, Alberta. Since 2011, Metro Cinema has operated out of the Garneau Theatre in the Strathcona district of Edmonton. Prior to that it operated out of the Zeidler Hall in the Citadel Theatre in downtown Edmonton. [1]
The Garneau became Metro Cinema's new home in July 2011, and was officially reopened in September 2011. [2] It was designated a Municipal Historic Resource on October 28, 2009. [3] Designed by noted Edmonton architect William Blakey and built in 1940, the Garneau is the only remaining theatre of the early modernist style and period in Alberta.