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Parts of the eighth episode "Business Trip" from the fifth season were set in Winnipeg. The NBC comedy is filmed in Los Angeles and due to their schedule/budget did not film scenes in Winnipeg. Though the series had shot scenes in New York City, they never left California for this episode. The episode did not call for any Winnipeg-specific locales.
My Winnipeg; N. New in Town; Niagara Motel; Night Hunter (2018 film) Night Mayor; Nobody (2021 film) Nobody 2; Normal (upcoming film) O. Oak, Ivy, and Other Dead Elms;
Landmark opened an Extra auditorium in Winnipeg in May 2015. [16] Landmark has replaced two former Extra auditoriums with Laser Ultra, including Shawnessy in 2021 and Waterloo in 2023. Xtreme is a premium large format at the West Kelowna location; it is similar to Extra Experience, but uses Dolby Atmos instead of 7.1 surround sound.
It has also screened some Winnipeg Jets playoff hockey games, [1] and hosted the team's NHL Entry Draft parties. [19] [20] The restaurant employees between 20 and 30 individuals, with staffing increased to as many as 50 employees for events. [9] It hosts dinner and movie nights, which include a buffet dinner, a movie, and popcorn. [18]
Silver City is a 1951 American Western film directed by Byron Haskin and starring Edmond O'Brien, Yvonne De Carlo, and Barry Fitzgerald. [ 2 ] It was adapted from the 1947 novel High Vermilion by Luke Short , and was released under that title in the UK.
Silver City Airways, a British airline; SilverCity, a Canadian movie theater chain run by Cineplex Entertainment; The Silver City, a 1956 memoir by Ion Idriess; Silver City, a 2004 book, second in The Silver Sequence by Cliff McNish
In 2012, the former Cinema City McGillivray in Winnipeg was renamed to Cineplex Odeon McGillivray and VIP Cinemas, and its lineup was changed to first-run films. The Cinema City Movies 12 in Edmonton closed on January 8, 2023, due to age and unpopularity, and the Cineplex Cinemas Manning Town Centre up north outperformed it as well.
In 1933, the theatre closed on account of the Great Depression, and in 1936 it was seized by the City of Winnipeg due to unpaid taxes. [3] In 1944, the theatre was purchased by theatre owner Henry Morton. [3] Odeon Cinemas' Canadian subsidiary converted the theatre to a cinema in 1945. During the conversion to a cinema, many of the original ...