Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Seattle International Film Festival (SIFF) executive director Tom Mara has announced the company’s acquisition of the Seattle Cinerama Theater from the estate of late Microsoft co-founder Paul G ...
The turnaround began in 1997 when developers revealed plans to turn the Cinerama into a dinner theater or a rock-climbing club. This sparked a grassroots effort to save the historic venue, with local film buffs circulating petitions and issuing an urgent cry for help, which was answered by multi-billionaire Paul Allen, himself a movie fan and patron of the theater during its 1960s heyday.
The Film Center includes a 90-seat multi-use theater, multi-media classroom, exhibition spaces, archives, and offices for SIFF and the Film School. [12] In October 2011, SIFF Cinema moved from McCaw Hall to its current location in the Uptown Theater. SIFF utilizes all three of the Uptown's three screens for year-round programming.
On January 30, 2010, the annual Science Fiction Short Film Festival will be held at the Seattle Cinerama Theater in Seattle, Washington. 10 short films will screen in the first session 4:00pm – 6:00pm; 10 short films will screen in the second session 7:00pm – 9:00pm. An awards ceremony follows the second session. Short films presented. Alma
The SIFF Egyptian Theater reopened on October 3, 2014. [7] The theater returned to the SIFF circuit beginning with the 42nd annual festival in 2016. [8] The theater closed indefinitely in November 2024 due to water damage following a leak on the fourth floor. Several screenings were moved to other SIFF venues around the city. [9]
Angelenos are still processing their grief about the closure of the ArcLight theaters. Pacific Theatres announced on Monday that it would close all of its locations, which include the ArcLight ...
The Cinerama Dome was designed for the three-projector system but never actually had it installed until recent years as it opened with the first of the single film 70 mm Cinerama films, It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963). Cinerama restorationist and former Canadian broadcast engineer, Tom H. March's Calgary basement. [24]
Cinerama Releasing Corp. Cineville; Columbia Pictures; Commonwealth United Entertainment; Continental Distributing (A Division Of Walter Reade-Sterling Inc.) Crown International Pictures; Distributors Corporation of America (DCA) Dominant Pictures Corporation; Eagle Lion Films Inc. Eagle Lion Classics Inc. Embassy Pictures; Eternal Pictures ...