AMC Braintree 10

121 Grandview Road,
Braintree, MA 02184

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Tom10
Tom10 on October 6, 2005 at 4:07 am

dwodeyla: when I find the slides, I’ll be glad to scan them and send them. DaVia: The design of the first Braintree General Cinema your Dad did was quite handsome, a rather classic modernist theater building of the day. The lobby was about two stories high and had floor to ceiling windows on the west elevation which was the front of the building. In the late afternoon, the sun streamed into the lobby. Please give your Dad my best. Perhaps he knew John Norton at GCC headquarters. That theater was a real part of my youth, myself being one of the first mall rats at So.Shore Plaza, and I saw many films there. tn

daviapc
daviapc on September 29, 2005 at 10:32 am

As mentioned by dwodeyla, The original Braintree was the South Shore Cinema, built in 1966. The architect and general contractor for the project was William Riseman and Associates, Architects, Boston, MA who designed most of the General Cinema Theaters in the east. Their designs were often duplicated and site adapted throughout the country. My father was the principal assoc architect with the firm from it’s formation in the early forties. My father is 92 and lives in Wrentham, MA.

David Wodeyla
David Wodeyla on September 7, 2005 at 4:25 am

I’d love to see scans of your slides, I managed the old theatre in the South Shore Plaza from 1975-77 and again 1983-1986. I have a few black and white photos, not much.

Tom10
Tom10 on September 7, 2005 at 4:16 am

dwodeyla: Yes, the listings should be made. Somewhere, in my piles of architecture stuff, I have some slides I took of the GCC Braintree theater, the one that’s a Circuit City now. I know some people at the Braintree Historical Society who might have a photo of the Braintree Theater in Braintree Square. bigred: I noticed when AMC took over the Braintree GCC that the quality of the place declined.

bigred
bigred on September 7, 2005 at 12:40 am

Your right about General Cinema being about quality but to bad the same doesn’t go for AMC. They are more concerned about crushing or elimiting compition rather than quality.

David Wodeyla
David Wodeyla on September 6, 2005 at 10:31 am

It might be a good idea to list the 3 “Braintree theatres” seperately. This listing started as the new theatre on the hill called the Braintree Cinema, before that, the General Cinema in the South Shore Plaza, called South Shore Cinemas, and finally, downtown, the Braintree Theatre.

Tom10
Tom10 on September 6, 2005 at 7:52 am

I think you’ve listed them all. I forgot that the Cameo in South Weymouth had been twinned, as well as the theater in Scituate Harbor. The Loring is a wonderful, local theater with a loyal following. They now have Dolby. I’ve never visited Stoughton. I live in hope that the Wollaston will revive, but I guess it’s beyond the pale. I had the same hope for the East Milton theater. I see the Norwood theater has been twinned. I haven’t been there in years. Anyway, in my note to Richard I said “HAD” some single venues, which is, alas, mostly the case.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on September 6, 2005 at 5:47 am

The only remaining South Shore single screens I can think of are Loring Hall in Hingham, and the Stoughton cinema pub, neither of which I have yet visited. The Wollaston appears to be closed indefinitely. Are there others?

In fact, in the entire Boston area, the only single screens I can recall are the two I listed above, plus the Brattle in Cambridge, the Studio in Belmont, and the Cabot Street in Beverly. (I’m not including museum, college, and IMAX venues.)

Tom10
Tom10 on September 6, 2005 at 5:35 am

Richard: <<If you think the matinee was bad you should have seen Friday nights. >> Yikes! Glad I missed those. I’m trying to remember, did the theater have a balcony? My recollection is that it did not. Do you recall the “Art” theater in Quincy Square? My memory of it is fading, though positive. I think it might have had a Deco style exterior and possibly interior. The South Shore had a number of decent, single-screen venues (some of which remain) before the ‘plexes took over. tom

crownx
crownx on September 4, 2005 at 6:58 am

Thanks tom N ..If you think the matinee was bad you should have seen Friday nights.

Tom10
Tom10 on September 4, 2005 at 5:43 am

Richard: The Braintree Theater was purchased by the owner of the then nearby Barile Plumbing company and converted into a commercial building in the early sixties. It may still be called the Barile Building. Barile Plumbing is gone, I believe. The building has professional offices on the second floor and a mix of retail and offices on the first floor. I recall friends of my parents saying the Braintree Theater was popular, drawing people from surrounding towns. I attended a few matinees there when I was very young, just before it closed. Kids matinees then were extremely noisy and rowdy. Such behavior would NEVER be tolerated today.

crownx
crownx on September 3, 2005 at 4:01 pm

I was manager for a year or so at the Braintree Theater in the Square around 1954. It was a typical suburban theater showing double features, one feature once and the other twice evenings and continuous on week-ends.It was a single screen before the days of General Cinema. At the time it was under the banner of Lockwood and Gordon.George Follis from Quincy, as mentioned in one of the earlier posts filled in a substitute projectionist once in a while.I haven’t been back in a long time..Think it is some kind of retail store now

Tom10
Tom10 on June 26, 2005 at 3:03 pm

dwodeyla: I think AMC mainly just wants to get big. They just announced they were buying Loew’s. So, Boston is now a one company movie theater town again, I think, if you don’t count the Kendall in Cambridge, which is a a Landmark and or Samuel Goldwyn theater. I’m sure AMC figures obsessive attention to soap dispensers does little for the bottom line. I pay attention to such things. During the eighties and early nineties, I was a theater checker for the Braintree Cinemas. They figured out who I was, and I got moved down to the Hanover Cinema, a less glamourous assignment. They removed the Dolby equipment when I was there. That theater is open again under different ownership. I drove by about a month ago around nine in the evening. It was packed. Anyway, regarding the Braintree Ten—no more THX and no more Kodan screen certification either.

David Wodeyla
David Wodeyla on June 25, 2005 at 7:34 pm

Sounds like AMC isn’t keeping an eye on facility maintenance. Or else (and more likely) the Manager isn’t paying attention.

Tom10
Tom10 on June 5, 2005 at 12:47 am

I saw Star Wars III at the Braintree AMC a few days ago. I was in Cinema 4, I think, the second largest auditorium size there. (The five auditoriums on the left side of the building are mirrored by the five screens on the right) The manager said SW didn’t draw enough of a crowd to run in the biggest venue (5 or 6, I think). The big auditoriums used to be designated as having THX sound. Not any more. Cinema 3 looked as though it still had the HPS-4000 sound equipment, which for my money is as good as or better than THX. The lobby looked about the same. The rest rooms looked shop worn and in need of repair and cleaning. Some of the faucets didn’t work, and they’d stuck the new soap dispensers on top of the old. :–(

jph
jph on May 27, 2005 at 4:59 pm

the Braintree 10 is identical to Burlington 10 except for screens 2 and 9, which are considerably bigger in Braintree than Burlington. Wonder if AMC has changed any of the layout and design since taking over GCC?

snorwood
snorwood on February 22, 2005 at 9:04 am

The current Braintree 10-plex is a similar design to the current Burlington 10-plex (which was built a few years afterwards). Both are now operated by AMC.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on January 11, 2005 at 2:56 pm

Did that movie ever open in Boston, or did everyone have to get out to the suburbs to see it?

David Wodeyla
David Wodeyla on January 11, 2005 at 1:59 pm

With Six You Get Eggroll premiered at 3 General Cinemas on the same day, Braintree, Peabody, and Framingham, with a helicopter taking Barbara Hershey, et al to each location. When they arrived in the parking lot at Framingham, there was a High School band playing to greet them. Probably the same kind of local things happened at each location. There was even a Boston Record American with an extra front page wrap announcing the event, handed out at each theatre.

I don’t know why the Boston suburbs were chosen for the event.

ErikH
ErikH on January 11, 2005 at 12:04 pm

The new Braintree multiplex was, I believe, the first theater in the Boston area to feature Dolby Digital sound. Although I was living in the Metro West area at the time, I remember trekking over to Braintree to check out “The Fugitive” —– the only reason I would have traveled that distance was due to the Dolby Digital presentation.

Anyone know the reason why “With Six You Get Eggroll” had its world premiere in Braintree? It’s rare for a major Hollywood film to have a world premiere in Boston (Hitchcock’s “Frenzy,” “The Paper Chase” and the megabomb “Raise the Titanic” are among the few that come to mind), so the world premiere of a major release in the Boston ‘burbs strikes me as just about unheard of.

David Wodeyla
David Wodeyla on January 11, 2005 at 11:32 am

Projection was handled by George Follis and John Grebauski, for most of the years, that the South Shore Plaza Cinema was in operation. Mr Follis was the business agent for the local, and ran a 16mm film rental business in Quincy on the side. Both men worked seven days a week, rather than allow a relief man in their booth.
The floor staffs generally were long tenured, and younger brothers and sisters followed in their siblings footsteps in working the Cinema. It was the only theatre in the circuit which had a Matron on the payroll, from 1966 until she retired in the late 1980’s. Her name was Miriam.

Tom10
Tom10 on January 11, 2005 at 9:02 am

A quick follow-up to dwodeyla’s comments. General Cinema really did have a good reputation in Braintree. I grew up there. Stated simply, they were one of the best, possibly THE best, theater chains of their era. The projection and sound were always first rate. They had all sorts of charity events and were community oriented. Both the old and new theaters had good architecture for their building type. The old theater is a retail store.

Tom10
Tom10 on October 17, 2004 at 2:37 pm

The new Braintree Cinema on Grandview is now an AMC Cinema with the demise of the General Cinema chain. It’s one of the last theaters to have been built by General Cinema with conventional seating before the advent of stadium style auditoriums. I attended a charity Star Wars Marathon they had for the opening. I paid extra to see the films in the THX auditorium. I think they have (or had) two of them. The smaller auditoriums are delightful, almost like private screening rooms. I saw the original plans for the building. They’d planned that half the auditoriums would have stereo equipment. By the time the building was finished, all the auditoriums had stereo. One auditorium has an HPS-4000 speaker system. It’s superb and has better mid-range than the THX venues. General Cinema was quality company. I’ve not visited the theater since it was bought by AMC.

David Wodeyla
David Wodeyla on October 15, 2004 at 3:07 pm

The new Braintree theatre tenplex was built on the hill across the highway, overlooking the old South Shore Drive In, and the original Braintree Cinema was renovated into a Circuit City. The new theatre on the hill was designed by Cambridge Seven / Bob Luchetti in the late 1980’s.

David Wodeyla
David Wodeyla on October 10, 2004 at 6:14 pm

The original Braintree was the South Shore Cinema, built in 1966. It eventually was split a couple of times to become Cinemas I,II,III,and IV. This theatre was one of General Cinema’s best grossing houses in the Boston area, especially when it played Disney films. It was managed by Izzy Strier from about 1967 until 1975 when he moved up the Home Office theatre in Chestnut Hill. I followed in his footsteps, running it from 1975 until 1977, and again from 1983 until 1986. Some great engagements included Herbie the Love Bug, the World Premier of With Six You Get Eggroll, Jaws, Star Wars, Return of the Jedi, Freaky Friday, Grease, and many others. One of the most interesting things about running this theatre, was the opportunity to do some fantastic paste ups for the ads in the Patriot Ledger. I used to try all sorts of special things, like reverse type inside the oval, with a slim white seperation. Those who used to take special care in paste ups, might remember stuff like that. The South Shore Cinema had a fine reputation in the town of Braintree, working with the Town Clerk, on charity shows, and an annual Safety Patrol kiddie show. In addition, we were right across the road from the South Shore Drive In, and the ushers and candy girls enjoyed the benefit of going to both places to see free movies.