When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cinema City Czech Republic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinema_City_Czech_Republic

    In Europe it has cinemas in Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and Slovakia. CCI also runs a chain of Israeli multiplexes under the name of Rav-Hen. On 19 January 2011, as a part of a bigger European deal, Cinema City acquired 8 multiplexes (4 of them in Prague) from Palace Cinemas with 65 screens.

  3. University Cinema Scala - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_Cinema_Scala

    The first mobile cinematographs appear edin Brno in 1896 and the first permanent cinema opened in 1907. However, the current University Cinema Scala only opened about 20 years later, when there were already a number of other cinemas in the city: Centrál (the first cinema, that opened in 1907), Edison (1908), Varieté (later turned into the Divadlo Radost theatre), Oránia (1911), Lidový ...

  4. Westgarth Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westgarth_Theatre

    Without Yiannoudes' intervention and the Greek community's support for cinema during this period, it is unlikely that the Westgarth would have survived. [8] [9] A stage was added in the 1980s to allow for live performances, necessitating the removal of 15 seats. As with cinema in general, attendance declined in the 1980s due to the rise of home ...

  5. Reduta Theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduta_Theatre

    The Reduta Theatre (Czech: Divadlo Reduta) is a theatre in Brno, Czech Republic. It was built on the city's oldest square and began its life in Renaissance times as the Taverna (Tavern) Theatre. In 1767, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart performed with his sister in a concert there. It is now part of the National Theatre in Brno.

  6. M-Palace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-Palace

    M-Palace (Czech: M-Palác) is a high-rise building in Brno, Czech Republic. The building is 60 meters high and it is one of the tallest buildings in Brno. The building consists of a sixteen-floors tower and two-floors building. The tower is mainly used for offices and in the two floors building is a shopping mall.

  7. Nova Cinema (Czech Republic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nova_Cinema_(Czech_Republic)

    Nova Cinema is a Czech free [2] digital television channel in the Czech Republic, owned and operated by CME, and a sister channel of TV Nova.. The channel broadcasts various films (thematically categorized from genres: crime, action, drama, comedy, Cartoon, Life to romantic, sci-fi, family or Czech films, fantasy), [3] or showbiz shows like Red Carpet Reporter ("Hvězdy červeného koberce ...

  8. Brno-Chrlice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brno-Chrlice

    Brno-Chrlice is a city district in the south part of the city of Brno, Czech Republic. It consists of the municipal part and cadastral territory of Chrlice (German: Chirlitz), originally an independent municipality that was annexed to Brno in 1971. The current city district was established on 24 November 1990.

  9. Cinema of the Czech Republic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinema_of_the_Czech_Republic

    Czech cinema comprises the cinema of the Czech Republic as well as contributions to cinema by Czech people during the Austrian-Hungarian Empire period.. The earliest Czech cinema began in 1898 with Jan Kříženecký, later major contributions were made by interwar directors such as Karel Lamač and Martin Frič, with Barrandov Studios founded in 1933.