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Cinema with three screens (Bio in Swedish means Cinema). Restaurant with meat, vegetarian and vegan dishes.
Cinema - In Bruges (2008)
One of the locations of the film directed by Martin McDonagh: the Belfry on the Grote Markt in the centre of the city of Bruges, West Flanders
Flanders, Belgium 22.05.2023
www.youtube.com/watch?v=p-gG2qo_l_A
www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXf-Q0YOWx8
Cinema - Brügge sehen ... und sterben? (2008)
Einer der Drehorte des von Martin McDonagh inszenierten Films: der Belfried am Grote Markt im Zentrum der Stadt Brügge, Westflandern
Flandern, Belgien 22.05.2023
Comillas had three cinemas, the VAL being the first to open in 1919, programming silent films and lasting a few years. It was replaced by COMILLAS (1926-1950) and CAMPIOS was inaugurated in 1946 with the film "El Sargento Inmortal", later it was run by José Fernández de la Vara and is still remembered by Comillanos for its good films -many premieres- and their pipes and popcorn. It closed its doors around 1982, after which it functioned as a nightclub and currently houses a supermarket.
An exhibition by the Fondazione Prada shows props, materials, visual and audio documents from Wes Anderson's film 'Asteroid City' (2023)
Fondazione Prada in Corvetto, Milan
Lombardy, Italy 13.12.2023
www.youtube.com/watch?v=QAfYCNdsuew
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gmmq7sVA0Jo
www.youtube.com/watch?v=-rAvTrqMBLs
Eine Ausstellung der Fondazione Prada zeigt Requisiten, Materialien, Bild- und Tondokumente von Wes Andersons Film 'Asteroid City' (2023)
Fondazione Prada in Corvetto, Mailand
Lombardei, Italien 13.12.2023
www.youtube.com/watch?v=QAfYCNdsuew
The IMAX cinema opened in 2000 and was the first IMAX cinema to be built in Scotland. Like the Science Centre, the IMAX Glasgow is clad in titanium.
Memorial at Hawkhead cemetery to commemorate those who died in the Glen Cinema disaster 80 years ago
The Electric Cinema first opened in London's Portobello Road on 24 February 1910. It was one of the first buildings in Britain to be designed specifically for motion picture exhibition, and was one of the first buildings in the vicinity to be supplied with electricity.[3] It was built shortly after its namesake the Electric Cinema in Birmingham, which predates it by around two months. Its first film was Henry VIII, screened on 23 February 1911.[3]
The venue opened 18 years before talkies became the norm, so had no facilities to broadcast sound.[3] The cinema was soon eclipsed by the huge picture palaces that became fashionable during the 1930s but, despite being shuttered for brief periods, it has remained in almost continual use until the present day.[4][5]
The classic crime film 'Charade', directed by Stanley Donen in 1963, took its protagonists Audrey Hepburn and Cary Grant to many original locations in Paris of the 1960s.
The Théâtre Marigny is located on the Avenue des Champs Élysées in the direct neighbourhood of the garden of the Élysée Palace in the 8th arrondissement. The theatre was the location for the final fight in which Cary Grant rescues Audrey Hepburn from the villain Walter Matthau.
Paris, France 04.07.2021
www.youtube.com/watch?v=01ZWXIY1mcs&list=PLZbXA4lyCtq...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHAKZISr6Rg
www.theatreinparis.com/blog/a-history-of-paris-theatre-ma...
Der von Stanley Donen 1963 inszenierte Krimiklassiker 'Charade' führte seine Protagonisten Audrey Hepburn und Cary Grant zu vielen Originalschauplätzen im Paris der 60er Jahre.
Das Théâtre Marigny liegt an der Avenue des Champs Élysées in direkter Nachbarschaft zum Garten des Élysée-Palastes im 8. Arrondissement. Das Theater war der Drehort des Schlusskampfes, in dem Cary Grant Audrey Hepburn vor dem Bösewicht Walter Matthau rettet.
Paris, Frankreich 04.07.2021
www.youtube.com/watch?v=01ZWXIY1mcs&list=PLZbXA4lyCtq...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHAKZISr6Rg
www.theatreinparis.com/blog/a-history-of-paris-theatre-ma...
Orpheus Cinema Bristol an archive image of its special Art Deco Lighting Architecture...Sadly The Building has been demolished (Image from the City Archives)
Thanks everyone for your welcome back yesterday - your kind words were much appreciated. Hopefully I can keep going in a limited capacity over the next few weeks until I have finished my various other projects.
The Dome Cinema, Worthing, West Sussex, England, is a grade II* listed building owned by the Worthing Dome & Regeneration Trust.
The Dome is an Edwardian building and one of the oldest working cinemas in England, and was opened in 1911 (Brighton's Duke of York's Picture House was opened in 1910). It was opened by Swiss impresario Carl Adolf Seebold. It was originally named The Kursaal — a German word translating as "cure hall". The Kursaal was used as a health centre and entertainment complex by visitors to the seaside town. At the time it contained the Coronation Hall, which was used for roller skating, exhibitions, concerts and events, and the Electric Theatre, the first cinema run for paying audiences in West Sussex.
Following the outbreak of World War I leading residents of the town objected to the German name and after a competition with a prize of £1, the Cinema was renamed "The Dome".
The huge Art Deco auditorium was built by J. Long and Sons Ltd. for the Avon Cinema Co. Ltd. and opened on May 19th 1934. A shallow stage was used for variety and the building containes a large cafe and a dance hall at first floor level, and shops and a spacious foyer at ground level.
Down each side of the auditorium is a celebrated frieze of Roman figures. A huge richly plastered ‘sunburst’ feature dominates the ceiling and decorative grills are placed either side of the stage which has recently been extended into the auditorium to facilitate the live concerts/Bath Festival usage.
The Forum Cinema closed in 1969 and was converted to bingo usage. This too closed and following aborted development plans the Bath City Church took over in 1988 and instigated a renovation of the building which now acts as a church & concert hall in the auditorium, and dance school and various community rooms in the former cafe and dance hall areas. It is also a major venue for the annual Bath Festival.
The Forum Cinema is Grade II* Listed building.
Europe, The Netherlands, Zuid Holland, Rotterdam, Schouwburgplein, Pathé cinema (slightly cut)
This Pathé Schouwburgplein multiplex cinema 1996, Koen van Velzen) has seven screening rooms and was built on top of an existing parking garage during the renovation of the Schouwburgplein. This meant that the cinema had to be constructed in a lightweight manner. The supporting structure of the edifice is made of steel and, apart from the concrete floors, light materials such as plaster and corrugated sheet have been used throughout. The large screening rooms are lifted by means of steel columns above a large foyer area with three smaller rooms below. The building was largely wrapped with transparent corrugated sheets but these were changed to more neutral ones.
The 7Artisans fisheye was utilized again here. The lens‘ album is here.
"As far as we know, the Keswick Alhambra Cinema is the sixth oldest continuously-running cinema in the UK. The original, single screen Edwardian auditorium remained open throughout both world wars and has only ever closed for any length of time for the Covid lockdowns in 2020 and 2021. In 2021 we completely refurbished the cinema, adding a second, 29 seater studio screen, digital laser projection and Dolby sound systems, creating a beautiful lobby and reception space, and cleaning and repointing the facade. Today the two-screen Alhambra shows a wide range of films, from mainstream to arthouse, with a choice to appeal to all ages and tastes, together with the best of the world's theatre, ballet and opera, relayed live by satellite several times a month. Open every day of the year, including Christmas Day, and always offering a warm welcome"