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You can watch the top 10 films of the latest Sight & Sound Top 100 Poll: The Best Films of All Time projected in 4K at the Bill Cosford Cinema on the University of Miami campus.
Mr. Mike's Mondo Video is a 1979 American Mondo-Mockumentary film conceived and directed by Saturday Night Live writer/featured player Michael O'Donoghue.It is a spoof of the controversial 1962 documentary Mondo Cane, showing people doing weird stunts (the logo for Mr. Mike's Mondo Video copies the original Mondo Cane logo).
Bill Cosford for the Miami Herald described it as among the "knife-in-the-night genre" using a rock-concert backdrop featuring high-decibel "new-wave" bands saying "this music and it's strange milieu is used to nice effect, punching up a wheezy plot."
The Standard Theatre, now known as the Folly Theater and also known as the Century Theater and Shubert's Missouri, is a former vaudeville hall in downtown Kansas City, Missouri. Built in 1900, it was designed by Kansas City architect Louis S. Curtiss. The theater was associated with the adjoining Edward Hotel (known later as the Hotel Missouri ...
The Vox Theatre opened as the Rosedale Theatre on December 20, 1922 as a silent movie theater. The Rosedale Theatre was originally owned by T.L. Ricksecker and cost $30,000 to construct. The theater is located at 1405 Southwest Boulevard in the Rosedale neighborhood of Kansas City, Kansas.
Top 13 of 2023. Adam Sandler: The movie star and former “Saturday Night Live” regular will take his standup act to only 11 cities early in 2023. 7:30 p.m. Feb. 11, T-Mobile Center ($34.50-$164 ...
The Miami Herald ' s Bill Cosford praised the film, describing it as "scary and not overworked, and Weston shows a fine, gloomy hand at times." [ 8 ] Robert C. Trussell of The Kansas City Star praised Groves's performance, but felt the film overall was "a substandard horror effort that tries to compensate for its trite plot with large helpings ...
The basement lounge in 2005. Designed by Rapp & Rapp, the 90,000-square-foot (8,400 m 2) theater opened on October 30, 1921 as the Mainstreet Missouri.The 3,200-seat theater was a popular vaudeville and movie house, and the only theater in Kansas City designed by Chicago firm Rapp and Rapp.