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Earliest purpose built cinema in Toronto. Bayview Theatre Leaside: 1936 1961 1 Later was a live theatre venue known as the Bayview Playhouse. Now a drug store. Beach Theatre The Beaches: 1919 1970 1 Remodeled into a shopping centre. Cineplex Cinemas Beaches (formally Alliance Atlantis Beaches) 1651 Queen Street East, Queen and Coxwell 1999 ...
The Paradise Theatre is a movie theatre located at 1006 Bloor Street West [1] in the Bloorcourt Village neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It first opened in 1937, closed in 2006, and then was to be turned into a pharmacy. [2] [3] [4] However, it was restored and re-opened on December 5, 2019. [5]
The Elgin was closed as a movie theatre on November 15, 1981; [7] the final film presented at the theatre was What the Swedish Butler Saw. [8] From March 1985 through March 1987 the musical Cats was very successfully presented in the essentially unrestored Elgin, showing the viability of the theatre. The building closed in 1987 for a full ...
The CAA Theatre, formerly the Panasonic Theatre, is a theatre located at 651 Yonge Street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is operated by Mirvish Productions . On December 1, 2017, Mirvish Productions announced a marketing partnership with CAA South Central Ontario , which included renaming the venue that was known as the Panasonic Theatre.
Cinesphere is the world's first permanent IMAX movie theatre, located on the grounds of Ontario Place in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Constructed in 1971, it is the largest IMAX theatre in Ontario. The theatre has both IMAX 70mm and IMAX with Laser projection systems. The theatre is considered a building of heritage value and shows movies each ...
The Doha Film Institute’s Qumra talent and project incubator event returned as a 100% in-person event last week, bringing participants together face-to-face in Doha for the first time since it ...
The theatre screened classic films, art films, and cult films. The Rocky Horror Picture Show was traditionally screened with a live cast on Halloween and on the last Friday of every month. The Bloor Cinema was repeatedly selected as the best repertory cinema in Toronto by Eye Weekly. The theatre was independent and reopened after its renovation ...
In 2010, it was re-opened under new management, Rainbow and Magic Lantern Theatres, [2] [4] who ran the cinema until 2016, when it was acquired by Imagine Cinemas. [5] [6] It was subsequently reopened in 2017. [1] The cinema is well known in Toronto for playing foreign, arthouse, and independent films that are often ignored by larger chain ...