Movie Theaters Worth the Drive?

Posted on December 8, 2014 at 8:00 am

Movie theater owners are constantly having to up their game to sell tickets, knowing that many film-lovers have well-equipped home theaters and will wait three or four months until the movies are available for home viewing. It can be tough when changes made to accommodate more films result in a diminished (literally) viewing experience. Brookes Barnes writes about what some theaters are doing in the New York Times.

“When I step back and think about what will get people off a couch, in a car, down the road and into a theater, the answer is not postage stamp-sized screens and old seats,” said Gerardo I. Lopez, the chief executive of AMC Entertainment, the No. 2 chain in the United States. “Why would they bother? What the hell, stay in the house.”

So, what’s the answer? Barnes writes that:

some theater chains are now installing undulating seats, scent machines and 270-degree screens.

For an $8 premium, a Regal theater here even sprays patrons with water and pumps scents (burning rubber, gun powder) into the auditorium. Can’t cope with two hours away from your smartphone? One theater company has found success with instant on-screen messaging — the texted comments pop up next to the action.

And if you find yourself in Seattle, be sure to make time for the sumptuous Cinerama theater extensively by Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen.

Even before its latest remodeling, the Cinerama was a jewel: an increasingly rare single-screen theater with comfortable seats, fantastic sightlines and state-of-the-art digital projection and sound.

But if you are as rich as Mr. Allen — No. 46 on the Forbes billionaire list — that isn’t good enough. The renovated Cinerama has a new digital projector — the first installed in a commercial theater, according to Mr. Allen’s representatives — that uses a laser as a light source rather than the xenon lamps used by older digital projectors.

The benefits of the new projector will be more apparent in 3-D movies, providing a brighter image and less eyestrain than from older 3-D projectors, said Ryan Hufford, a senior systems engineer for Vulcan, Mr. Allen’s investment firm.

The Cinerama has 110 new speakers, up from about 60 before, made by Meyer Sound, the high-end manufacturer that makes the speakers in Carnegie Hall. The system uses a new sound technology called Dolby Atmos that envelopes theatergoers with sounds from all directions, including above their heads.

Don’t miss his EMP Museum, either.

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Leonard Maltin’s Collection of Movie Memorabilia on eBay

Posted on December 2, 2014 at 8:00 am

Copyright Disney 2002
Copyright Disney 2002

The great critic and film historian Leonard Maltin has moved to a new home and so he is putting some of his fabulous collection of movie treasures up for auction on eBay.

Maltin writes:

Long ago I got hooked on pressbooks, those oversized, slick-paper campaign booklets that include movie ads and promotional gimmicks. I’m starting to weed out my collection, so if you’re interested in John Wayne titles like The Flying Leathernecks or The Sea Chase, an ad supplement for Bogart and Bacall in The Big Sleep (with a few ads cut out), Robert Youngson’s The Golden Age of Comedy and The Further Perils of Laurel and Hardy, or a reissue of Laurel and Hardy’s Great Guns, take a look. I even have a 1949 reissue pressbook for King Kong which RKO paired with Val Lewton’s I Walked With a Zombie. There are plenty more to come.

We have an overabundance of Disney collectibles, from a charming 1940 Syroco figure of Pinocchio to a handful of limited-edition pieces from an old Disneyana convention. (My favorite is a figurine of Donald Duck striking the gong from the opening sequence of The Mickey Mouse Club.) There’s also a lovely ceramic lamp of Bambi from the 1940s manufactured by Goebel.

If there’s a movie fan on your gift list this year, you may find just the treasure you’re looking for here.

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Classic Hollywood Memorabilia Auction Tomorrow from Bonhams/TCM

Posted on November 23, 2014 at 8:00 am

Copyright Bonhams 2014
Copyright Bonhams 2014

Bonhams and Turner Classic Movies have joined together again for another auction of classic Hollywood memorabilia, with treasures from the golden age of movie-making, including the piano Sam plays “As Time Goes By” on in “Casablanca,” the cowardly lion’s costume from “The Wizard of Oz,” and scripts for “It Happened One Night,” “Dr. Strangelove,” and “The Lady Eve.” There’s a script of “David Copperfield” signed by the whole cast and the script supervisor’s copy of “To Kill a Mockingbird” with a small photo of the ham costume worn by Scout on the cover. There are dresses worn onscreen by Deborah Kerr, Grace Kelly, Rita Hayworth, and Maureen O’Hara. You can bid on Moe Howard’s watch, Laurel’s and Hardy’s suits, or a suit worn by Jerry Lewis in “The Nutty Professor.” Even if you are not a collector, it is still a lot of fun to page through the catalogue.

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Interstellar at the Smithsonian’s Udvar-Hazy Air and Space Museum

Posted on November 10, 2014 at 3:25 pm

 

Copyright 2014 Nell Minow
Copyright 2014 Nell Minow

Every element of Christopher Nolan’s “Interstellar” was really happening in front of the camera. Well, they didn’t actually go into space and explore other planets, but they did build every piece of equipment and they did seek out landscapes around the world that would seem like other planets. The spaceship they built is now on display at the Smithsonian’s Udvar-Hazy Air and Space Museum near Dulles Airport in Northern Virginia, and I drove out there to take a look.  The detail work is spectacular.

Copyright 2014 Nell Minow
Copyright 2014 Nell Minow

They also have an Oculus Rift virtual reality “Interstellar” experience that is completely immersive. You feel as though you are floating in zero gravity through the interior of the spacecraft. It will be there through November 20, 2014, and it is definitely worth the trip. And you can see the movie when you’re there, on one of the biggest screens in the world.

Oculus Rift
Copyright 2014 Nell Minow
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