This theatre opened with Vertical Limit, Proof of Life, WWF: Armageddon, Dungeons & Dragons, Billy Elliot, Red Planet, Rugrats in Paris, The Legend of Bagger Vance, 102 Dalmatians, and Unbreakable.
As Mike mentioned, Cineplex Odeon opened this theatre on December 22, 1995. It opened with Grumpier Old Men (Dolby Stereo), Toy Story (Dolby Stereo), Sabrina (Dolby Stereo), Jumanji (Dolby Stereo), Waiting to Exhale (Dolby Stereo), Heat (Dolby Stereo), Dracula: Dead and Loving It (Dolby Stereo), Cutthroat Island (Dolby Stereo), Casino (Stereo), Balto (Stereo) and Sudden Death (DTS).
This theatre opened with Deep Impact (Digital) THX, Titanic (Digital), City of Angels (Digital), Sliding Doors (Digital), He Got Game (Digital), Paulie (Stereo) and Ballistic Kiss (Stereo).
20th Century Theatres opened this cinema on October 5, 1973, 2ith The Pyx, Paper Moon, I Could Never Have Sex With Any Man Who Has So Little Regard For My Husband, and Electra Glide in Blue.
Central Parkway Cinemas opened on December 26, 1980, with The Tim Drum, The Black Stallion, Airplane!, and Stardust Memories. As Mike mentioned prior, it was independent before being acquired by Cineplex Odeon in the 80s. It was later used as a school for projectionists and reopened years later by Dollar Cinemas. By the Mid 90s, Golden Theatres acquired it before selling it again to Encore Cinemas in 1999. By 2000, it became independent again when CineStarz acquired it in 2008.
SilverCity Brampton opened on November 19, 1999, with The Sixth Sense, The Insider, The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc, Double Jeopardy, Sleepy Hollow, The World is Not Enough, Three to Tango, and Pokemon: The First Movie.
The theatre opened with Alien: Resurrection (Digital) THX, Flubber (Digital) THX, Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (Digital), The Midnight Garden of Good & Evil (Digital), Anastasia (Digital), The Rainmaker (Digital), Starship Troopers (Digital), FairyTale: A True Story (Stereo), and The Jackal (Digital).
This theatre opened on December 18, 1998, the same day as AMC Winston Churchill and Cineplex Odeon First Markham Place. Its opening features are What Dreams May Come, Elizabeth, Waking Ned Devine, Life is Beautiful, Jack Frost, The Prince of Egypt, Pleasantville, American History, Rush Hour, Meet Joe Black, The Wizard of Oz, Celebrity, Antz, The Seige, and I Still Know What You Did Last Summer. On a side note, this megaplex’s footprint is surprisingly small, and I consider it the smallest AMC in Canada when it was built.
This theatre opened with Living Out Loud, Very Bad Things, Rush Hour, Outside Ozona, The Prince of Egypt, Waking Ned Devine, Elizabeth, Antz, Meet Joe Black, Pleasantville, Jack Frost, What Dreams May Come, American History, The Wizard of Oz, Ronin, Life is Beautiful, The Red Violin, Home Fries and Celebrity.
This theatre opened on May 19, 1999, with Star Wars-Episode 1: The Phantom Menace, Midsummer Night’s Dream, Tea with Mussolini, Life is Beautiful, The Red Violin and Encounter of the Third Dimension in IMAX.
This cinema actually opened on September 29, 1989. The Grand Opening advert even said so. It opened with War Party, Sea of Love, Sex, Lies, and Videotape, Welcome Home, and Millennium.
This theatre opened on April 6, 2001, with Blow, Along Came a Spider, The Tailor of Panama, Pokemon 3: The Movie, Blow Dry, Just Visiting, Heartbreakers, Spy Kids, Exit Wounds, Traffic, Tomcats, Someone Like You, See Spot Run and Get Over It. It has stadium seating with AMC Love Seats and Sony Dynamic Digital Sound.
Colossus opened on February 12, 1999, with My Favorite Martian, Message in a Bottle, Life is Beautiful, Shakespeare in Love, She’s All That, Payback, Blast From the Past, Rushmore, Saving Private Ryan, Thin Red Line, The Prince of Egypt, The Red Violin, T-Rex: Back to the Cretaceous and Special Effects, the latter two were presented in IMAX. All cinemas were THX certified and have digital sound (mostly Dolby Digital).
This theatre opened on November 24, 1999, with End of Days, Flawless, The Insider, Princess Mononoke, Felicia’s Journey, Three to Tango, Music of the Heart, The Best Man, House on Haunted Hill, Drive Me Crazy, The Story of Us, American Beauty, Blue Streak, Bats, Stigmata, Three Kings, Superstar, The Limey, Mystery Alaska, Random Hearts, The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland, Stir of Echoes and The Thomas Crown Affair. It opened with stadium seating with AMC Love Seats and Sony Dynamic Digital Sound. It competed with Famous Players Oshawa Centre until 2002 when they started showing the same films. Why is that?
Why is Cineplex keeping this former AMC despite also having Cinema Banque Scotia nearby on the same street. This feels like a Yonge-Dundas vs Scotiabank situation in Toronto. Am I right?
The previous Famous Players Pickering opened on March 6, 1998, with these films: U.S. Marshals, Krippendorf’s Tribe, Hush, Twilight, The Big Lebowski, Dangerous Beauty, Flubber and L.A. Confedential. (*) denotes digital sound (I’m guessing Dolby Digital).
This theatre opened with these movies with () denoting Digital Projection and (^) denoting VIP: The Golden Compass^, The Mist, Hitman, Enchanted, Beowulf*, No Country For Old Men, Fred Claus, August Rush^ and American Gangster^.
This theatre opened with Princess Mononoke, The Insider, Double Jeopardy, Three Kings, Three to Tango and Pokemon: The First Movie.
This theatre opened with Vertical Limit, Proof of Life, WWF: Armageddon, Dungeons & Dragons, Billy Elliot, Red Planet, Rugrats in Paris, The Legend of Bagger Vance, 102 Dalmatians, and Unbreakable.
As Mike mentioned, Cineplex Odeon opened this theatre on December 22, 1995. It opened with Grumpier Old Men (Dolby Stereo), Toy Story (Dolby Stereo), Sabrina (Dolby Stereo), Jumanji (Dolby Stereo), Waiting to Exhale (Dolby Stereo), Heat (Dolby Stereo), Dracula: Dead and Loving It (Dolby Stereo), Cutthroat Island (Dolby Stereo), Casino (Stereo), Balto (Stereo) and Sudden Death (DTS).
This theatre opened with Deep Impact (Digital) THX, Titanic (Digital), City of Angels (Digital), Sliding Doors (Digital), He Got Game (Digital), Paulie (Stereo) and Ballistic Kiss (Stereo).
My mother saw The Smurfs and the Magic Flute at this theatre in 1983.
20th Century Theatres opened this cinema on October 5, 1973, 2ith The Pyx, Paper Moon, I Could Never Have Sex With Any Man Who Has So Little Regard For My Husband, and Electra Glide in Blue.
Central Parkway Cinemas opened on December 26, 1980, with The Tim Drum, The Black Stallion, Airplane!, and Stardust Memories. As Mike mentioned prior, it was independent before being acquired by Cineplex Odeon in the 80s. It was later used as a school for projectionists and reopened years later by Dollar Cinemas. By the Mid 90s, Golden Theatres acquired it before selling it again to Encore Cinemas in 1999. By 2000, it became independent again when CineStarz acquired it in 2008.
SilverCity Brampton opened on November 19, 1999, with The Sixth Sense, The Insider, The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc, Double Jeopardy, Sleepy Hollow, The World is Not Enough, Three to Tango, and Pokemon: The First Movie.
The theatre opened with Alien: Resurrection (Digital) THX, Flubber (Digital) THX, Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (Digital), The Midnight Garden of Good & Evil (Digital), Anastasia (Digital), The Rainmaker (Digital), Starship Troopers (Digital), FairyTale: A True Story (Stereo), and The Jackal (Digital).
This theatre opened on December 18, 1998, the same day as AMC Winston Churchill and Cineplex Odeon First Markham Place. Its opening features are What Dreams May Come, Elizabeth, Waking Ned Devine, Life is Beautiful, Jack Frost, The Prince of Egypt, Pleasantville, American History, Rush Hour, Meet Joe Black, The Wizard of Oz, Celebrity, Antz, The Seige, and I Still Know What You Did Last Summer. On a side note, this megaplex’s footprint is surprisingly small, and I consider it the smallest AMC in Canada when it was built.
This theatre opened with Living Out Loud, Very Bad Things, Rush Hour, Outside Ozona, The Prince of Egypt, Waking Ned Devine, Elizabeth, Antz, Meet Joe Black, Pleasantville, Jack Frost, What Dreams May Come, American History, The Wizard of Oz, Ronin, Life is Beautiful, The Red Violin, Home Fries and Celebrity.
This theatre opened on May 19, 1999, with Star Wars-Episode 1: The Phantom Menace, Midsummer Night’s Dream, Tea with Mussolini, Life is Beautiful, The Red Violin and Encounter of the Third Dimension in IMAX.
This cinema actually opened on September 29, 1989. The Grand Opening advert even said so. It opened with War Party, Sea of Love, Sex, Lies, and Videotape, Welcome Home, and Millennium.
This theatre opened on April 6, 2001, with Blow, Along Came a Spider, The Tailor of Panama, Pokemon 3: The Movie, Blow Dry, Just Visiting, Heartbreakers, Spy Kids, Exit Wounds, Traffic, Tomcats, Someone Like You, See Spot Run and Get Over It. It has stadium seating with AMC Love Seats and Sony Dynamic Digital Sound.
Colossus opened on February 12, 1999, with My Favorite Martian, Message in a Bottle, Life is Beautiful, Shakespeare in Love, She’s All That, Payback, Blast From the Past, Rushmore, Saving Private Ryan, Thin Red Line, The Prince of Egypt, The Red Violin, T-Rex: Back to the Cretaceous and Special Effects, the latter two were presented in IMAX. All cinemas were THX certified and have digital sound (mostly Dolby Digital).
This theatre opened on November 24, 1999, with End of Days, Flawless, The Insider, Princess Mononoke, Felicia’s Journey, Three to Tango, Music of the Heart, The Best Man, House on Haunted Hill, Drive Me Crazy, The Story of Us, American Beauty, Blue Streak, Bats, Stigmata, Three Kings, Superstar, The Limey, Mystery Alaska, Random Hearts, The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland, Stir of Echoes and The Thomas Crown Affair. It opened with stadium seating with AMC Love Seats and Sony Dynamic Digital Sound. It competed with Famous Players Oshawa Centre until 2002 when they started showing the same films. Why is that?
Why is Cineplex keeping this cinema despite also having Scotiabank Theatre and Varsity in the same city?
Why is Cineplex keeping this former AMC despite also having Cinema Banque Scotia nearby on the same street. This feels like a Yonge-Dundas vs Scotiabank situation in Toronto. Am I right?
The previous Famous Players Pickering opened on March 6, 1998, with these films: U.S. Marshals, Krippendorf’s Tribe, Hush, Twilight, The Big Lebowski, Dangerous Beauty, Flubber and L.A. Confedential. (*) denotes digital sound (I’m guessing Dolby Digital).
This theatre opened with these movies with () denoting Digital Projection and (^) denoting VIP: The Golden Compass^, The Mist, Hitman, Enchanted, Beowulf*, No Country For Old Men, Fred Claus, August Rush^ and American Gangster^.
This theatre opened on November 21, 2001, with Novocaine, The Man Who Wasn’t There, Black Knight, Amelie, and Spy Game.
Famous Players installed the four additional theatres on June 30, 1999.
Famous Players installed the two additional theatres and the IMAX screen on June 30, 1999.
I have an idea: raise your hand if you think that Colossus on the other side caused AMC Interchange to close.
Why is Cineplex keeping this one open despite not being too far away from Cineplex Odeon Devonshire Mall?