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MJR Theatres was created in 1980 by Mike Mihalich with the acquisition of Main Theatre (sold in 1997 and now known as the Main Art Theatre) in Royal Oak, Michigan. The name MJR was taken from their original slogan Movies Just Right. During the 1980s and 1990s, the company purchased several theaters and drive-ins in Michigan.
This is a list of movie theater chains across the world. [1] [2] ... Classic Cinemas [20] 15 121 Downers Grove, IL ... MJR Theatres: 11 170 Bloomfield Hills, MI
Woolworth closed its Southgate store in January 1994, and Discovery Zone opened in its place later that year, occupying the space until being replaced by Sears Hardware by 1997. Construction of the MJR Southgate Digital Cinema 20 megaplex theater began in late 1997 and officially showed its first movies on November 6, 1998.
A moviegoer at MJR Southgate Cinema in suburban Detroit was arrested for allegedly engaging in lewd behavior during a screening of the new Kristen Stewart film “Love Lies Bleeding.” The ...
Screen X will open on Nov. 22 at MJR Marketplace Cinema in Sterling Heights for the releases of “Gladiator II” and the first installment of “Wicked."
Celebration of Cinema & Television: December 4, 2023 Breakthrough Performance Award Won [18] National Board of Review: December 6, 2023: Top 10 Independent Films A Thousand and One: Won [19] Breakthrough Performance Teyana Taylor Won Boston Society of Film Critics Awards: December 10, 2023: Best New Filmmaker A. V. Rockwell Runner-up [a] [20 ...
Of these, ten are megaplexes with 20 or more screens. These are found in Sterling Heights, Auburn Hills, Clinton, Dearborn, Southfield, Southgate, Brighton and Ypsilanti. Since then, Cinemark Theaters opened a 12-screen location at Southland Center in Taylor in April 2016, Cinemark also offers the Rave Motion Pictures Ann Arbor 20 in Ypsilanti.
An interior entrance to the Macy's store in May 2015. This was taken before the store opened for the day. Southland Center, planned by Detroit-based Hudson's as early as 1962, [2] was designed by Victor Gruen Associates and Louis G. Redstone Associates, and the newly formed Dayton-Hudson Corporation (a merger of Hudson's and Dayton's of Minneapolis) developed the mall. [3]