AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center
8633 Colesville Road,
Silver Spring,
MD
20910
8633 Colesville Road,
Silver Spring,
MD
20910
26 people
favorited this theater
Showing 251 - 275 of 378 comments
Hooray. I’m wondering if this print will be the one with the recently discovered ORIGINAL 6-track soundtrack probably mixed for DTS? I’m looking forward to it even if I’m not a major fan.
On the Ziegfeld page, there are several blogs about its original run, with curtain usage and the intro with whistles and snapping fingers coming at you in stereo from different parts of the theater? Should be interesting.
Just a head’s up that there will be three showings of ‘West Side Story’ in glorious 70mm for the film’s 50th Anniversary at the AFI/Silver next month:
Friday February 11: 8:30pm
Saturday (12th): 9:30pm
Sunday (13th): 5:30pm
the new film program (Feb. 2 – Apr.14) came in the Post this morning.
On Wednesday, I saw “Black Swan” in the historic main # 1 auditorium. The curtain moved a bit afterwards in regard to slides, but did not open before the picture or close afterwards. Staff confirmed the curtain is used sometimes. Sound was great, with surround sound from side walls & back very loud. I had to guess which movie was in auditorium 1 because the website & answerimg machine announcement do not identify which movie is in which auditorium, and the offices were closed over the holidays. If staff is reading this, please identify which movie is in which theater on the website (even if there’s a caveat that last minute the movie might change)! Visiting from Philadelphia, my time was worth it only
if the movie that I wanted to see was in the historic auditorium. Enjoying a movie in the historic auditorium was a real treat.
the place to vent is on their facebook page, add a comment to one of the postings and you will more than likely get a response – I complained about their one showing of ‘Empire Strikes Back’ and got a reply almost immediately.
I was being flippant, of course, about the DVD sound level problem. You’d think as a viewer, more so the Manager of a Movie Theater, you would want to see/experience movies as optimally as you can, which means decent sound levels to create that immersive experience. You’d think AFI, of all places, would be more concerned to not show movies at conversational levels. If I managed the place, I’d make sure sound levels are up even if I have to create some of my own.. :D
I wrote back to the Manager I emailed before to see what response I get. I’ll post it when/if I receive it.
sound levels were also a problem at last years showing of ‘Pink Floyd – The Wall’ – granted that was a DVD presentation, the low sound, it was probably a given that it was to be a lacklustre experience – oh how I would love to have a time machine and see/hear ‘The Wall’ in 70mm!
Last week, I happened to catch two movies that were part of the 80’s film retrospective. Specifically, the Richard Donner cut of Superman II and Star Trek III. A few months ago, I had written and requested if they could show at least one known 70mm print of ST3 in circulation and shown recently at the Laehmle Theater in LA. Initially, I received a response, from the webmaster, saying to look at the website again. DUH. Its not in 70mm. I replied and received another response stating that the 70mm print they could get was not as highly rated as the one shown this past week. Hmmm.
Superman II on the bigscreen was a welcome, if disappointing experience. The movie was advertised as being in Blue Ray. That may not be such a bad thing as the movie looked good in the Historic Auditorium. Unfortunately, the volume was played too low with barely discernible surrounds. I’d have to say the movie sounded better on my Sony system at home then it did here. Unfortunately, I do not have a 40 ft screen to myself to enjoy…
Star Trek III was also a disappointment. Its ironic that the movie played here over 26 years ago but not in 70mm. Apparently, they got a 35mm print that I’m reasonably sure was a mono print. There was no stereo sep/surround at all. As many times as I’ve seen this movie both in 70 and 35mm and in stereo at home, I know what parts are supposed to deliver when it comes to sound. Background chatter was not distinct, nor separate, or altogether non-existent during the bridge scenes and as the Enterprise enters and leaves Spacedock.
I had complained about the sound level being too low and the manager on duty and he said the film would be played loud. The reason for Superman II being so low in the sound department was that “it was a DVD.” I was about to say to him “so that means you can’t increase the sound playback on DVDs in your multi-million dollar theater?” The Manager had warned the 20 or so patrons in attendance that the film had scratches in some places and would be granting refunds prior. I did not notice anything that detracting to warrant a refund, other than the lack of SURROUND STEREO.
If the prior two lackluster presentations are indicative as to how they do retrospectives, then whats the point of having them? The awful presentations are more worthy of a Regal or AMC, not AFI.
Lastly, once again they ran out of my favorite pretzels. Is it my bad luck, or do they just don’t stock them anymore. Take them off the menu then. :P
the October Horror Film fest looks great, the films:
Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror
Dawn of the Dead [with Silver Spring ‘Zombie walk folk]
Tucker & Dale vs. Evil
Let the Right One in
Shaun of the Dead
Suspiria (!!!) on the big screen this should be amazing!!
Nice looking.
Here is a March 2010 photo:
http://tinyurl.com/yhgypet
Here is a photo circa 1938:
http://tinyurl.com/y98at5l
a shout out that PLAYTIME in 70mm will be presented twice next month – the 20th (7pm) and the 21st (5pm)
This is one of the best theaters in the world. I saw so many movies here: Sasquatch on a snow day in the 70’s, Superman 2, Empire Strikes Back, Star Trek 3, Terminator and dozens of others…
In 1985 I drank approx. 18 beers and whiskey shots and we went to see Missing in Action 2. I saw maybe 5 minutes of the movie and then spent the rest of the time hurling into the toilet. As my buddies dragged me out the whole toilet came loose from the wall and fell on its side, water flooding the bathroom.
I didnt go there for a few months, just in case.
Two Cinemascope musicals will also get shown this month: ‘Brigadoon’ and ‘It’s Always Fair Weather’
‘Ben Hur’ in all it’s w-i-d-escreen goodness is screening this weekend (Saturday and Sunday, 16th and 17th)
I’m really looking forward to the David Fincher showcase and seeing “Moulin Rouge!” on the big screen again
I disagree…I love the popcorn. So much so that I always get a free refill from the cute girl behind the counter. I eat it at work all week long. She tells me that a lot of people do the same thing. If I had a gripe it would be that they often run out of butter. It’s real butter, too. I wish they’d keeop a bit more on tap, that’s all.
Looking forward to my yearly Casablanca fix. I have to renew my membership this month, too. It’ll be my fourth year as an AFI member. If you are a DC film lover it’s a no brainer. For $100 I get 8 free movies, invites to special screenings, the yearly AFI book, a years subscription to EW, yadda yadda. Again, a great (tax deductible, too) gift to myself!
(psst… I bring in Panera stuff in all the time.) I do like the beer the Silver has on tap. Their popcorn though is waaay oversalted. Compared to Landmark’s popcorn their corn is vastly inferior.
We saw “Slumdog Millionaire” in the Historic Auditorium to a decent crowd. Excellent presentation and sound. The curtains were drawn after the slide show, which by the way FINALLY, after five years, has decent promos for all things AFI. They should have done this when they first opened. Its good advertising for the place and helps keep funds going in.
Unfortunately, they still don’t carry my favorite stuffed pretzels. After talking with the attendant, she says they changed vendors and haven’t had those for quite a long time. Another patron could be heard requesting the same thing as they advertise the availability of ‘gourmet pretzels.’ All they have now are the plain, yucky Costco-type frozen gup. No thanks. They do have single sized ‘gourmet pizza.’ I had the plain cheese one that was barely cooked in the middle even though the cheese on the outer edges was a little burned. Given all this, I may have to resort to sneaking in food from either next door’s Panera or one of the eateries close by. Shame on you, AFI. You can do better.
What a beautiful-looking theatre!! Looks like another cool movie palace for the likes of great golden oldie-but-goody classics such as Dr. Zhivago, West Side Story, Sound of Music, and many others.
‘The Dark Crystal’ looked great – the pic seemed overmmatted, the image looked wider than what it’s supposed to be (2.35), but the sound and music score in particular seemed really restrained.
This coming Saturday and Monday’s showing of ‘Ryan’s Daughter’ will be in digital projection – which may or might not be a bad thing. Going to check it out Monday night.
hmmm, I was a little miffed. I saw ‘The Muppet Movie’ yesterday, and the print was not OAR (1.85) it was a cropped print.
man, I saw ‘Aliens’ at the crappy Mazza Gallerie theaters when they were on the lower lever – terrible theatre to experience such a great movie. Sadly from the newsprint program I got over the weekend, the cut of ‘Aliens’ is the theatrical cut.
There were 70mm releases of “The Goonies” (I saw that a the then newly renovated Avalon in ‘85 with my little cousins in glorious HPS 4000 stereo), “The Dark Crystal” (in '83 at the then newly renovated and triplexed MacArthur), Poltergeist ('82..the Embassy had it in 70mm but that was in a bad area of town), “Aliens” (in '86 at the KB Fine Arts..closed now).
In70mm.com reported that there was a 70mm print out for “Poltergeist” out there. It would be great if the AFI could track it down for the showing. Not sure of the other movies. As for “Aliens,” I want to see the extended cut as it fleshes out the Ripley character in greater depth that gives her relationship to Newt more resonance. If its 35mm, I doubt its going to have that same impact as my memories of the KB Fine Arts 70mm showing that sticks in my mind so vividly.
“Flashdance” would be cool to see again in theaters. I loved the soundtrack and if the print is a decent one, or newly struck one, it should be great to experience in theaters the Giorgio Moroder score and many top 10 songs that were in the movie. Also, the cool strobe light effect during the ‘Imagination’ dance number would be good to see onscreen again.
It was great to see all the films at the recent Silverdocs festival being shown in DLP in all three auditoriums as such. About 2 percent of the films were actual 35mm prints.
“Totally Awesome 80’s Movies Part 2” open next month through the end of August – and I can’t wait to see ALIENS on the big screen – the last time I saw it theatrically was at the lower level theatres at Mazza Gallerie on their small rinky dink screens (long gone btw)
other films in the series will include:
The Goonies
Girls Just Want to Have Fun
The Breakfast Club
Sixteen Candles
Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains
Better Off Dead..
One Crazy Summer
The Dark Crystal
Labyrinth
They Live
Can’t Buy Me Love
The Thing
Poltergeist
Flashdance
Videodrome
Videodrome
Dirty Dancing
Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure
Adventures in Babysitting
Aliens
Near Dark