Cine

1170 Central Avenue,
Dunkirk, NY 14048

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Additional Info

Previously operated by: Dipson Circuit

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Opened in the early to mid-1970’s as a small single-screen theater. In about 1990, it was converted into a two-screen configuration. The Cine closed in 1995 and was demolished in December of 2004.

Contributed by Paul Somerfeldt

Recent comments (view all 19 comments)

mcmaenza
mcmaenza on December 20, 2006 at 12:43 pm

Patsy, sorry but I don’t know a lot of the details about the Cine other than as a patron. I went away to college in Rochester in 1983 (back only on breaks until graduation in November of 1987). By 1988, I had moved down south to NC and only came back on occasion at holidays and for class reunions. The last time I saw a movie in the Cine was probably during a college break in the 80’s – back when it was still a single screen. Around that time, just a few hundred yards away in the rest of the D/F Plaza, a place called Central Video opened up. It was kind of something new – they had these small screening rooms (a half dozen to a dozen I think) that had TV screens and VCRs in them. You would go and pick out a video in the main part and then go see it in one of the rooms. I remember going there at least once with a few of the girls I went to high school with (six people could be comfortable in the single viewing room). They also sold candy, popcorn and drinks. So, it was like a personal theatre thing. I don’t know who ran the place or how long it lasted. But, the presence of something like that could have had some effect on the Cine attendance (as it gave folks another alternative for a movie out – albeit these would not be first run flicks being seen here).

psomerf
psomerf on December 20, 2006 at 2:46 pm

Martin – That video place (I think it was called something else, but brain fade is occurring right now) was short lived. I don’t think it lasted more than 18 months, including the time after it changed to a regular video rental store. Through the 80’s the Cine was fairly busy for average to good movies. (I left in January 1990.) [After thought, Mickey’s Flicks, maybe?]

Patsy – I think the Cine arose out of the loss of the Capitol, and the need for a theater between Dunkirk and Fredonia. It had a Dipson logo on the side of it for as long as I remember. (I lived closer to the Regent, so went there more often than the Cine. That changed with the summer of ‘77. :)

I suspect the Cine closed due to a lack of business. When they got greedy and divided it into two screens, they killed it. The Cine was a small theater to begin with, seemed like it was half the size of the Regent, but probably 2/3 its size. In 90/91, an old Ames store was converted into a multi-cinema, and provided the viewers with more choices, even if the viewing experience was of similar (low) quality. The last movie I saw at the Cine was “Blown Away”, released in the summer of 1994. I think I saw it late in the summer, perhaps suggesting it was second run by that time, but I don’t know for sure. My friend and I were the only ones in the screening room at the time, don’t remember what was showing in the other room, or how many other paying customers were in the building at the time.

mcmaenza
mcmaenza on December 20, 2006 at 3:00 pm

Paul, it was Mickey Flicks. Thanks for remembering. I guess I’m getting old.

psomerf
psomerf on December 20, 2006 at 3:23 pm

Hey, I’m get old a couple of years ahead of you.

psomerf
psomerf on June 9, 2007 at 10:53 pm

The D & F Plaza, where the Cine one stood was sold last fall to another concern. There is new construction occurring on the property, where no other business has stood before. Not that this means anything for a building already demolished, but perhaps some enterprising person/group could bring in a new theater. Seeing as the only competition in town leaves a lot to be desired, and with the minigolf place all but abandoned, there is room for a decent tri or quad here.

psomerf
psomerf on November 1, 2007 at 4:33 pm

Martin – I was at the Monnies a couple of weeks ago, and the bartender made reference to to Mickey Flicks. I thought of this conversation. (By the way, I think we sort of know each other. You were class of ‘82 or '83, right? And took computer classes from Will @ DHS?)

Eastsidekid
Eastsidekid on July 7, 2008 at 4:08 pm

I did my undergrad at Fredonia, and we lived in Porter Manor; a decent walk for a five year old boy and his father to walk up and see Star Wars on a Friday evening. My son is a writier in Hollywood now, but he still remembers that star cruise streaking overhead in the opening shots!

psomerf
psomerf on July 26, 2011 at 12:37 pm

This is a (?!) case where, even if the theater was still standing, you couldn’t see it from the street view photos. While its address was 1170 central (The whole D&F Plaza shares the address), you be better able to see it from Millard Fillmore Drive or Main Street. Well, you would have been, had it still existed.

Mark Goodrich
Mark Goodrich on April 26, 2012 at 2:01 am

Oh, Yes! I went to SUNY Fredonia too, and saw so many movies at the Cine – “Animal House”, “Halloween”, “Empire Strikes Back” (that one was there for many weeks that summer!), and SO many others…I went to the Cine, to the Cinema 1 (now the Opera House), and the Regent in Dunkirk. These were all run by Mr. Burgett, I believe! Sometimes the woman at the Cinema One box office would let me in at the kiddie price! What memories!

psomerf
psomerf on August 6, 2012 at 10:38 pm

This theater opened on December 25, 1970 by the Dipson chain. It was a “new” style of intimate cinemas that was “sweeping the country” called a “mini”. It seated 350.

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