Dunes 1,2,3 Theatre

3398 Sheridan Road,
Zion, IL 60099

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jonrev
jonrev on December 11, 2023 at 11:52 am

A Popeye’s has been built on the former Dunes Theatre.

50sSNIPES
50sSNIPES on July 5, 2022 at 2:24 pm

Opened on October 17, 1946 with Bob Hope in “Monsieur Beaucaire” along with a local newsreel “Dunes Review”.

whtesoxfan56
whtesoxfan56 on November 20, 2014 at 8:02 pm

Oooh, this was torn down? That’s too bad, I didn’t realize that at all. I wonder what future plans for this site, will be?

jonrev
jonrev on October 25, 2014 at 12:06 am

Demolished in October of 2014.

swanick112
swanick112 on March 30, 2013 at 5:44 pm

I wish it was still open. If I could, I would love to buy it and see it open once again.

BEACHARK1
BEACHARK1 on April 27, 2012 at 10:54 am

Now closed. I thank because of upstairs bathrooms.

LouisRugani
LouisRugani on October 19, 2007 at 11:46 am

ZION — City commissioners are kicking around the idea of imposing an amusement tax, not as a new source of revenue but to help expand Zion’s one and only movie theater. Gurnee has such a tax and boasts Six Flags Great America. Zion’s sole privately owned entertainment business is the small, old Dunes Theater at 3398 Sheridan Road, the last remaining theater in Zion, and, so far, would be the only business subject to a proposed entertainment tax. Mayor Lane Harrison said the tax probably would not be adopted. “I don’t think we even want to pursue it. There are just too many unanswered questions,” he said, pointing to the legality for a municipality to level such a tax and then rebate it to the theater for use in expansion. The suggested amount of tax would be 5 cents per ticket. Harrison said there have been talks about expanding the three-screen theater, owned by Ryan Industries, to eight screens. He stressed that the Dunes has ample room to expand into an “enormous parking lot that is unused.”

A 5 cents-per-ticket tax would generate between $25,000 and $30,000 a year, according to some estimates. If the Dunes is expanded, revenue from the tax could reach $75,000. That’s a fraction of what Gurnee receives from its 3 percent tax. Last year the village collected $2.56 million in amusement taxes, according to Jim Hayner, village administrator. “It’s a good revenue,” he said. “In fact, the best revenue apart from sales taxes.” The revenue last year included $1.75 million from Great America, $175,000 from the Marcus theaters at Gurnee Mills, $20,000 from golf courses and $1,700 from an ice rink, also at the mall.

As a leader in amusement taxes, Hayner said other municipalities would often consult with Gurnee. Zion hopes to expand its tiny amusement sector, Harrison said, citing plans to build an eight-screen movie house at the northeast corner of Route 173 and Green Bay Road. A developer has shown an interest in the project, he said. “We have the demographics for it,” he said.

Zion is seeking new revenues to fill the vacuum created when ComEd closed its nuclear generating plant, once the city’s major employer and payer of real estate taxes.

From the News Sun

Allen92909
Allen92909 on July 20, 2007 at 9:11 am

The Dunes theater actually had a balcony a long time ago. There is still remnants of it there now, if you look in the ice room upstairs. I know people that worked there when there was a balcony.

Allen92909
Allen92909 on July 5, 2007 at 10:25 am

I work at the Dunes Theater in Zion. One of our employees who has been there almost 20 years has yet to ever meet the Ryhans. We are now owned by “C” you at the movies Inc though. They also own the McHenry theaters, the Antioch theater, and the Libertyville theater.

CatherineDiMartino
CatherineDiMartino on January 16, 2007 at 6:22 am

The Dunes Theatre in Zion, IL is a part of this chain (RMC). But there seems to be another RMC chain doing business in Effingham, Jacksonville, and Streator, IL and Waterloo all in Illinois. I was trying to find a website for the Dunes and the Liberty and all I found was a site for the above mentioned cinemas. The RMC website I found, www.rmccinemas.com wasn’t even updated—it said that all information for showtimes, party room rentals, etc., was “coming soon.”

A website shows that the Grayslake Drive-In and the Antioch were both RMC’s too.

Life's Too Short
Life's Too Short on May 18, 2006 at 6:00 pm

I saw a show there in the 80’s, when a buddy of mine lived up there. I thought it was a decent place (unlike Zion itself which is pretty ghetto).

Hermie
Hermie on May 18, 2006 at 4:05 pm

The Dunes was a stand-alone single-screen theatre. There were some unique features about the building. It included space for two small places of business on opposite sides of the building, with the theatre entrance in the middle. For years a barber shop occupied the north shop, while the south end had a tv repair shop, a currency exchange, and a baseball/collectibles store.

It used to have a vertical neon sign outside, but that was removed back in the 60’s. The theatre had no balcony, but the washrooms were on the second floor. A large single wall of glass block served to let sunlight in during the daytime for both washrooms. At night, the the glass lock wall was illuminated by the washroom lights and you could barely make out the people in the washroom…(Just shadows mind you, the stalls were no where near the block wall.)

I believe it’s currently run by the Rhyans, who still own the Liberty in Libertyville, and the Antioch Theatre. As there are few first-run theatres close by the communities of north Waukegan, Zion and Beach Park, it seems to draw a respectable number of patrons.