Comments from meheuck

Showing 151 - 157 of 157 comments

meheuck
meheuck commented about University City Cinema on Aug 4, 2004 at 12:48 pm

General Cinema had many theatres designed like this in Columbus now gone: the Town & Country and the Great Western for example. All were free-standing single screens later twinned. And all are now gone.
If I recall correctly, what finally doomed the University City was not just GC’s pullout, but a large flood of water (pipe burst?) that so damaged the interior that anyone who wanted to perhaps take on the property was scared off by the repair bills.

meheuck
meheuck on Aug 4, 2004 at 12:42 pm

The Western Woods cinema was a General Cinema operation, a single screen adjacent to a mall in a then-popular shopping district in Cincinnati. (I want to say it was Glenway Avenue) It was closed by the late ‘70’s and likely got absorbed into the mall as more store space. But I remember seeing a couple Disney movies there as a small child.

The Westwood was the single split into a twin as the above writer states.

meheuck
meheuck commented about Fox Redondo Theatre on Jun 3, 2004 at 3:10 am

I think XvXMatthewXvX was talking about the Fox California in San Jose that was being remodeled, according to LarryS.

I hope that is indeed true.

meheuck
meheuck commented about Studio Cinemas on Apr 23, 2004 at 5:46 am

Actually, THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW played at another downtown theatre operated by Mid-States, the Skywalk on Vine St. I went there numerous times to see it. That theatre got demolished for what was the Fountain Square West project, and I believe a new Lazarus department store stands on that site.

meheuck
meheuck commented about Hollywood Cinema North on Apr 23, 2004 at 5:40 am

The Hollywood was a beautiful single screen that was split into a twin in the ‘80’s. It was on a bus route so I could go there easily by myself as a teenager, which I did often.

An interesting story: In the last years of its operation, to thwart rowdy types who had been frequenting and disrupting the theatre, they temporarily switched to an “art/classics” format. I was told they used dual projectors in both houses, and as such were able to get access to prints usually not leased out to platter houses. The experiment did not last long and they went back to second-run fare after a month and a half. I wonder if indeed the “gangbanger” types wandered in during that period, and/or stuck around for something like Truffaut’s THE STORY OF ADELE H., which I saw there during that brief time.

meheuck
meheuck commented about Mariemont Theatre on Apr 23, 2004 at 5:34 am

The Mariemont is now a 3-screen theatre operated by the same people who run the Esquire in the Clifton neighborhood of Cincinnati. Their official website is www.mariemonttheatre.com

meheuck
meheuck commented about Mann Plaza Theater on Mar 26, 2004 at 2:07 am

The plan may be to close it down, but so far, the theatre is still open, thankfully.