Regency Village Theatre
961 Broxton Avenue,
Los Angeles,
CA
90024
961 Broxton Avenue,
Los Angeles,
CA
90024
86 people
favorited this theater
Showing 251 - 275 of 488 comments
Pretty much every mainstream movie is offered digitally nowadays… Every new theater built by AMC, Regal, RAVE, etc is all digital.
Won’t that limit their selection of films to only those released in digital format?
Mann’s month to month for the National lasted 8 months. But if Rave is negotating with the owners, Mann’s involvement may not be that long. It will be interesting to see how this all plays out. I’m feeling better that these theatres will stay around and hope it will be for a indefinate amount of time.
Now, something has to be done about the Chinese.
Slight change of plans. Mann told the employees that they are going month to month after March. So I assume the deal isn’t finalized.
I also heard Rave was the one taking over but that isn’t confirmed at all. They typically run all digital and don’t have projectionists. That’s not going to sit well with the union. If a non-union theater wants to book red carpet premieres, there is going to be some drama.
well I’m really glad to hear that the Village (and Bruin also?) will continue to be a first run house.
Does Rave have any THX certified theaters? Does anyone know if the new management of the Village will continue paying the THX certification fee?
segask it all depends on what the wording is on the lease as to what will be left in place or removed. When AMC closed the former GCC Beverly Connection 6, they sold the equipment to the people who run the Academy in Pasadena which also ran the Fairfax, South Bay etc. . The only thing they really might leave is the Norelco AA-II projectors (they weigh alot) and most of the speakers (since they are used). If they are still running other complexes select things might leave the theatre for a new home.
Ed, It sounds good to me. I will not believe it to be a joke.
Ed, we know your connections…at least I do. So I consider your statement a dead giveaway! :)
Good move for them. I’d better not see any blinding neon next time I go there.
Are they getting Grauman’s & Chinese 6 too?
I can’t wait for April 1st. People are going to see who is operating the theatre on April 2nd and wonder “It’s this some kind of April Fools joke?” To which it will not be. But that’s all I can say at the moment.
William, thanks for all the insider info on equipment that Mann has taken/left behind when they left those other theaters.
But since the Mann chain is shrinking nowadays, do you think they would probably just leave all the good projection/sound equipment this time?
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Isn’t C: his hard drive on his computer and not from a photo site.
My browser does not know how to follow URLs that begin with “C:” instead of “http:”. Can you post another message with an http: URL for the ads?
In most cases it all depends on the lease as to what equipment is left in the theatre. The lease can just say equiped theatre and that can included just projectors, platter and sound system. Any upgrades could be taken out and sold, if it is not spelled out in the lease agreement. When Mann pulled out of the Vogue Theatre in Hollywood, the lease had an equipment clause in it. The theatre had tobe equipment to show film. Before it closed Mann replaced the good 70MM/35mm projector with a ok running Simplex XL and pulled out the Dolby working processor and repleced it with a old Dolby CP-50 which needed help to run. The amps were old semi-work BGWs. As for the former Mann Regent they took the good Dolby processor and replaced it with an older model they left the Norelco 70MM projector there because it had a problem. Mann did this over at their former Huntington Oaks 6 in Monrovia afew years before it closed by moving the Norelco AA-II 70MM/35mm projectors out for a pair of old Simplex 35mm projectors. All the chains have done this in the past.
Inventory is always taken at a closing. Plus there are old theatre equipment brokers that buy old equipment for the used market. Or they see what is up there in the booth and moved to storage for later use in another house.
could you send these ads again?
C:\Users\BADBRAD\Pictures\MP Navigator EX\2010_02_27\IMG_0004.jpg.
Mann Theatre Ads for September 29, October 6 and October 13, 1976. Both Santa Monica and Westwood.
“@ segask, the sound system would stay. my friend over there told me they were taking inventory of all the equip. especially the soundrack. plus when the national closed, all the equip stayed behind.”
—posted by Talioni
thanks for the info Talioni! It is much appreciated. :)
I agree about Rave. A few weeks ago, they acquired close to 35 theaters(over 300 screens) from National Amusement, almost doubling in size. They are now the 5th largest domestic chain( after Regal, AMC, Cinemark and Carmike). The Village and Bruin would give them a presence and a calling card. Those theaters are prestigious, and for a newer exhibitor like Rave, that would put them on the map….I agree that one of the theaters would probably have to be used as the anchor for a multiplex,like the ArcLight and the Cinerama Dome —-that’s the only way the deal makes any economic sense. However building anything in Westwood is a nightmare of epic proportions.
In 1998, both Edwards and Pacific tried to buy the entire Mann chain.
@ segask, the sound system would stay. my friend over there told me they were taking inventory of all the equip. especially the soundrack. plus when the national closed, all the equip stayed behind.
But Rave could revialize the once planned multiplex behind the Bruin Mann was considering years back. It would have to be a plan for the future.
But Rave’s interest isn’t in single-screens, but big megaplexes… I have a really hard time believing that, too, unless it’s an undercover situation ala the Beverly Center.
I’d be very surprised by Laemmle given they’d be RE-ENTERING the Westwood market… although they do seem like a fit…
RAVE would be great. They seem to be serious about getting into L.A. exhibition. From the sound of it, the have taken a real interest in the Beverly Center. The Village and Bruin could be thier flagship theatres.
The owners of these vacant businesses need to apply incentives to get vendors in them. I think the problem with Westwood is that it is not fun to visit any longer. There was a time when you went there to shop, eat, and see a film. Now that is The Grove, 3rd St Promenade, etc. When I go now, it is pretty much timed to just see a movie. There is noting else to do there other than that these days. And the number of theatres is drastically dwindling. I doubt Landmark will renew the Regent lease when it comes up renewal.
I was about to ask the same question.
I hope that an ambitious exhibitor like Regency or Rave picks the Village and the Bruin up. I have no hopes for Pacific as they abandoned the Crest several years ago or Landmark as they seem to be abandoning or neglecting older theaters with the The Landmark nearby.
Laemmle?