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A few drive-in movie theaters around the country still exist, but in Wilmington they are a thing of the past. A 'drive' down memory lane: Where drive-in movie theaters in Wilmington used to be located
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Wilmington's film and television industry has ebbed and flowed for decades now. After boom years in 2021 and 2022, and a down year in 2023 due to the since-resolved writers' and actors' strikes ...
In 2022, Dark Horse Studios—which became Wilmington's second film studio in 2020—planned a 20-million-dollar expansion to their studio complex in Wilmington, set to be complete in 2024. [19] [20] [21] On September 27, 2023, Cinespace Studios announced it had purchased two EUE/Screen Gems Studios locations in Wilmington and Atlanta. [22]
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The series remained in Wilmington until 2003 when it was cancelled and replaced with One Tree Hill—a series on The WB/CW that calls North Carolina "home." One Tree Hill ended in 2012 after nine seasons. [14] While Wilmington, NC continued to sustain itself with television, the international film climate began to shift out of North Carolina's ...
It's been a slow start to the film and TV production season in the Wilmington area in 2024, with no projects shooting so far and just one, Amazon's third season of "The Summer I Turned Pretty," in ...
Regal Cinemas (also Regal Entertainment Group) is an American movie theater chain founded on August 10, 1989 and owned by the British company Cineworld, headquartered in Knoxville, Tennessee, [3] and operates the second-largest theater circuit in the United States, with 6,853 screens in 511 theaters as of December 31, 2021. [4]