To fully clarify the property’s second theatre (which is fully profiled, as “Movies 7”, on this site). Krikorian Premiere Theatres built a 7 plex on the opposite end of the property in 93'. It was sold to Regal in 96', closed in 03', and reopened as a discount house by Interstate (now Starplex Cinemas) about a year later. The current discount format has been quite successful.
In the early 80’s, this theatre was run by the same people who ran the Cinema Center and carried films that had bombed at their primary location. At that time, I believe it went by another name, not the Inn Cinema, but I could be wrong (memories from when I was 10 or 11 years old). It was a twin plex with extremely small “auditoriums”, each seating under 100. Looking much like a retail store that had been converted to a cinema, the auditorums had level floors and the lobby was about the size of a restroom. The theatre was located, in what was basically the corner of the basement, across from the then “Branding Iron” restraunt/lounge. I recall the decor being rather dark, perhaps, black/gold. A free standing marquee was located adjascent to South Street and stood long after the theatre had closed. If memory serves me, this theatre closed circa 82'/83'.
I remember the Showplace being far less ornate than the other North Street movie palaces. Almost plain, the exterior was a non descript white box and the interior had 60s/70s decore (I seem to recall a red and/or gold color sceme). Also, unlike it’s sister North Street theatres, the auditorium was somewhat narrow and long in dimensions. I do remember watching “ET”, with a sold out audience, at the Showplace, but this was probably the theatre’s “last hurrah”. If memory serves me it closed a few years before the Capital and Palace; both of which had been struggling even when the Showplace was still pulling in an audience. I believe the roof had collapsed prior to it being demolished.
The building is constructed in a typical megaplex T shape, with the four large auditoriums off the lobby and remaining theatres down two hallways. The projection booth is broken in to three areas, separated by the “Skybar Loungeâ€. A large room is located at the end of each first floor hallway, one has been converted to a birthday party/event rental room, the other was left unfinished and used for concession storage. A surprisingly small office and employee locker area are located on either side of the expansive women’s restroom.
The four largest auditoriums, 450 seats each, are equipped with Klipsch KMX 4-T grand speakers and feature both Dolby Digital and SDDS capability.
The women’s restroom is probably one of the largest one could hope to find. Located directly behind the concession area, it runs the width of the lobby and hosts a mind-boggling number of stalls that require a full time attendant on weekends.
A cafe and customer service booth were planned for either side of the lobby, but never moved beyond the planning stage.
The enormous artwork panels that line the building’s exterior all feature the artist (bearded man in a knit cap) and his friends. One also features the general manager of Krikorian’s Monrovia location.
The theatre opened with 133 staff members, twelve managers, seven projectionists, four supervisors, and two restroom attendants.
Buena Park’s Sky Bar was basically doomed from the start. The four large auditoriums have upper level exit doors in to the space (making it nearly impossible to control access), primary booth access is through the area, and there is only a closet available for storage. A neon sign, advertising the bar, was installed and there were some half hearted attempts to come up with design concepts, but I never felt as if the idea was ever truly serious. We were constantly told of proposed opening dates to tell customers, but these dates always passed and there wasn’t so much as an application for a liquor license filed.
There were numerous “high end” concepts that weren’t realistic or well thought out at Buena Park. There was a “mobile” concession stand built to service the anticipated customer overflow; idea being to roll it out and plug it in to one of the hallway network outlets or skybar outlet. However, the unit was built out of the same materials as the concessionstand (including stone countrtop) which made the “mobile” stand far from mobile. There ended up being no need for it, as the main stand was easily capable of handling business. Then, there were the rooftop spotlights, xenon powered and shooting beams a reported seven miles in to the sky. If only the theatre wasn’t located in heavily populated, and well lit, Buena Park, they might actually have been effective before midnight.
The theatre was definitely a great concept and a major step up from the standard megaplex, but there was a failure to consider many issues of reality in creating this dream theatre. Perhaps, the biggest issue being the mall.
In fairness to George Krikorian and company, the mall made a lot of promises that never materialized. There was supposed to be a total transformation and a number of big name businesses were alleged to be lined up. It turned out the mall was hoping the theare would attract these businesses. But, of course, the theatre’s true success was dependant on the mall having more to offer.
Blood was evicted from his Irvine location last Spring and recently vacated the Brea theatre (only the Orange and Mainplace theatres remain in the chain). So, I don’t think his chain has been doing all that well.
I briefly worked at Mainplace and attended numerous management training classes in the conference room when AMC ran the theatre. Even when attendance fell to pathetically low levels (occassionally less than twenty people on weekdays), during it’s final AMC years, the theatre was always kept up and run well. I find it quite sad that the theatre has been allowed to sink to it’s current state, but hardly surprising. Without AMC’s deep pockets, there is no realistic way to keep this theatre up; Captain Blood simply doesn’t have the financial means or ticket sales to do so. The location is terrible, as patrons are forced to walk through the mall, searching for a small box office and hidden food court escalator; features that are made all the worse due to the mall being closed during peak movie going hours (who wants to walk through an empty, darkened mall?). Had the theatre been built wih exterior mall access, I believe it would have faired far better.
I suggest you pick up some of the trade magazines (you can find web links on this site), research, and shop around. There are numerous booking services out there and finding the one that matches your needs is key. You should also try contacting independant theatres around the country; I’m sure there will be a few independant operators that will be willing to share advice and suggestions. The last thing you want to do is enter the industry blindly.
The theatre was known as “Studio Adultland”. While basically a single screen, in design, at some point two additional screens were added to the auditorium; the end result being multiple movies playing simultaneously in the same auditorium. As late as 1996, I recall this theatre running small block adds in the OC Register, alongside mainstream theatres (the titles were omitted, in favor of “call theatre for tittles”). I believe the theatre was strickly video projection and I am unsure if film projection equipment was even onsite. Oddly enough, the venue neighbored a religeous themed attraction.
As for the attempting to seperate by age; I worked at a chain that emplimented “no children” showings and they were sued for age discrimination. Also, I honestly can’t point the finger soley at teens and children for causing poor theatre experiences. In my fifteen years of theatre work, I’ve had just as many disruption issues with people in the 18 to 35 demographic. I’ve actually encountered more cell phone problems with those who are in their early to mid twenties than teenagers.
The theatre had a “soft open” in December of 87'. I don’t believe the concession stand was completed until mid January of 88'. The expansion was in May of 97' (I was on the expansion management team).
To fully clarify the property’s second theatre (which is fully profiled, as “Movies 7”, on this site). Krikorian Premiere Theatres built a 7 plex on the opposite end of the property in 93'. It was sold to Regal in 96', closed in 03', and reopened as a discount house by Interstate (now Starplex Cinemas) about a year later. The current discount format has been quite successful.
In the early 80’s, this theatre was run by the same people who ran the Cinema Center and carried films that had bombed at their primary location. At that time, I believe it went by another name, not the Inn Cinema, but I could be wrong (memories from when I was 10 or 11 years old). It was a twin plex with extremely small “auditoriums”, each seating under 100. Looking much like a retail store that had been converted to a cinema, the auditorums had level floors and the lobby was about the size of a restroom. The theatre was located, in what was basically the corner of the basement, across from the then “Branding Iron” restraunt/lounge. I recall the decor being rather dark, perhaps, black/gold. A free standing marquee was located adjascent to South Street and stood long after the theatre had closed. If memory serves me, this theatre closed circa 82'/83'.
I remember the Showplace being far less ornate than the other North Street movie palaces. Almost plain, the exterior was a non descript white box and the interior had 60s/70s decore (I seem to recall a red and/or gold color sceme). Also, unlike it’s sister North Street theatres, the auditorium was somewhat narrow and long in dimensions. I do remember watching “ET”, with a sold out audience, at the Showplace, but this was probably the theatre’s “last hurrah”. If memory serves me it closed a few years before the Capital and Palace; both of which had been struggling even when the Showplace was still pulling in an audience. I believe the roof had collapsed prior to it being demolished.
Some random theatre information:
The building is constructed in a typical megaplex T shape, with the four large auditoriums off the lobby and remaining theatres down two hallways. The projection booth is broken in to three areas, separated by the “Skybar Loungeâ€. A large room is located at the end of each first floor hallway, one has been converted to a birthday party/event rental room, the other was left unfinished and used for concession storage. A surprisingly small office and employee locker area are located on either side of the expansive women’s restroom.
The four largest auditoriums, 450 seats each, are equipped with Klipsch KMX 4-T grand speakers and feature both Dolby Digital and SDDS capability.
The women’s restroom is probably one of the largest one could hope to find. Located directly behind the concession area, it runs the width of the lobby and hosts a mind-boggling number of stalls that require a full time attendant on weekends.
A cafe and customer service booth were planned for either side of the lobby, but never moved beyond the planning stage.
The enormous artwork panels that line the building’s exterior all feature the artist (bearded man in a knit cap) and his friends. One also features the general manager of Krikorian’s Monrovia location.
The theatre opened with 133 staff members, twelve managers, seven projectionists, four supervisors, and two restroom attendants.
Buena Park’s Sky Bar was basically doomed from the start. The four large auditoriums have upper level exit doors in to the space (making it nearly impossible to control access), primary booth access is through the area, and there is only a closet available for storage. A neon sign, advertising the bar, was installed and there were some half hearted attempts to come up with design concepts, but I never felt as if the idea was ever truly serious. We were constantly told of proposed opening dates to tell customers, but these dates always passed and there wasn’t so much as an application for a liquor license filed.
There were numerous “high end” concepts that weren’t realistic or well thought out at Buena Park. There was a “mobile” concession stand built to service the anticipated customer overflow; idea being to roll it out and plug it in to one of the hallway network outlets or skybar outlet. However, the unit was built out of the same materials as the concessionstand (including stone countrtop) which made the “mobile” stand far from mobile. There ended up being no need for it, as the main stand was easily capable of handling business. Then, there were the rooftop spotlights, xenon powered and shooting beams a reported seven miles in to the sky. If only the theatre wasn’t located in heavily populated, and well lit, Buena Park, they might actually have been effective before midnight.
The theatre was definitely a great concept and a major step up from the standard megaplex, but there was a failure to consider many issues of reality in creating this dream theatre. Perhaps, the biggest issue being the mall.
In fairness to George Krikorian and company, the mall made a lot of promises that never materialized. There was supposed to be a total transformation and a number of big name businesses were alleged to be lined up. It turned out the mall was hoping the theare would attract these businesses. But, of course, the theatre’s true success was dependant on the mall having more to offer.
Blood was evicted from his Irvine location last Spring and recently vacated the Brea theatre (only the Orange and Mainplace theatres remain in the chain). So, I don’t think his chain has been doing all that well.
I briefly worked at Mainplace and attended numerous management training classes in the conference room when AMC ran the theatre. Even when attendance fell to pathetically low levels (occassionally less than twenty people on weekdays), during it’s final AMC years, the theatre was always kept up and run well. I find it quite sad that the theatre has been allowed to sink to it’s current state, but hardly surprising. Without AMC’s deep pockets, there is no realistic way to keep this theatre up; Captain Blood simply doesn’t have the financial means or ticket sales to do so. The location is terrible, as patrons are forced to walk through the mall, searching for a small box office and hidden food court escalator; features that are made all the worse due to the mall being closed during peak movie going hours (who wants to walk through an empty, darkened mall?). Had the theatre been built wih exterior mall access, I believe it would have faired far better.
I suggest you pick up some of the trade magazines (you can find web links on this site), research, and shop around. There are numerous booking services out there and finding the one that matches your needs is key. You should also try contacting independant theatres around the country; I’m sure there will be a few independant operators that will be willing to share advice and suggestions. The last thing you want to do is enter the industry blindly.
The theatre was known as “Studio Adultland”. While basically a single screen, in design, at some point two additional screens were added to the auditorium; the end result being multiple movies playing simultaneously in the same auditorium. As late as 1996, I recall this theatre running small block adds in the OC Register, alongside mainstream theatres (the titles were omitted, in favor of “call theatre for tittles”). I believe the theatre was strickly video projection and I am unsure if film projection equipment was even onsite. Oddly enough, the venue neighbored a religeous themed attraction.
As for the attempting to seperate by age; I worked at a chain that emplimented “no children” showings and they were sued for age discrimination. Also, I honestly can’t point the finger soley at teens and children for causing poor theatre experiences. In my fifteen years of theatre work, I’ve had just as many disruption issues with people in the 18 to 35 demographic. I’ve actually encountered more cell phone problems with those who are in their early to mid twenties than teenagers.
The Brookhurst is scheduled to close it’s doors once again. The theatre will be shut down 1/8/06
The theatre had a “soft open” in December of 87'. I don’t believe the concession stand was completed until mid January of 88'. The expansion was in May of 97' (I was on the expansion management team).