Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Picturehouse West Norwood. Picturehouse Cinemas is a network of cinemas in the United Kingdom, operated by Picturehouse Cinemas Ltd [1] and owned by Cineworld. [2] The company runs its own film distribution arm, Picturehouse Entertainment, [3] which has released acclaimed films such as Hirokazu Kore-eda's Broker and Monster, Scrapper, Corsage, Sally Potter's The Party, Francis Lee's God's Own ...
The closure of the Picturehouse comes on the back of the shutting down of a Picturehouse in Ashford, Kent, leading many to worry about the state of independent cinema. “This is symptomatic of ...
More than 240 UK workers who were let go this week by exhibition giant Cineworld have written to group CEO Mooky Greidinger calling for the exhibitor to rethink this week's mass redundancies in ...
The Picture House Regional Film Center, formerly known as the Pelham Picture House, [2] is a historic movie theater located in Pelham, New York. The rectangular building was built in 1921, in the Spanish Revival style and is oriented at an angle at the northwest corner of Wolf's Lane and Brookside Avenue. It features angled end bays, a ...
It is managed by Picturehouse Cinemas, who were bought by Cineworld in 2012. The cinema opened on 11 March 1911 as "the Electric Pavilion". It was built by E.C. Homer and Lucas for Israel Davis, one of a noted family of cinema developers, and was one of England's earliest purpose-built cinemas, seating over 750 seats in the single auditorium.
The Phoenix Picturehouse is a cinema in Oxford, England. [1] It is at 57 Walton Street in the Jericho district of Oxford. The Phoenix used to be an independent cinema, [2] and from 1989 the Picturehouse Cinemas chain developed from it. Since 2012 the multi-national Cineworld group has owned Picturehouse Cinemas.
Hebden Bridge's Picture House cinema first opened its doors in 1921 and is one of the last civic-owned cinemas in Britain. [citation needed] Originally boasting over 900 seats, its first screening was a double bill of Torn Sails and The Iron Stair.
The ‘Notting Hill’ star lamented the decline of cinemas amid the rise of ‘streaming’ and ‘scrolling’ Hugh Grant ‘miserable’ as he blames ‘scrolling’ and streaming for local ...