Cinema 23 Fiveplex

95 Pompton Avenue,
Cedar Grove, NJ 07009

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Showing 26 - 36 of 36 comments

John Fink
John Fink on May 17, 2010 at 8:47 am

Wow – I haven’t been to this one in about two years (last flick I saw there was The Assassination of Jesse James…. ), last I saw two weeks ago when I was driving past from the Clairidge in Montclair it was open. The theater did big business pre-Essex Green’s move to a 9-plex in the 1990’s, but I’m not sure if this is one Clearview got around to upgrading yet with new seats – a 3+ movie wasn’t comfortable here. If I recall the theater was most likely a chop shop: one theater to the right, one to the left and a hallway to 3 in the back, small concessions and bathrooms.

I wonder if CJM who is still active would acquire it back (if they legally can, I remember there was a fight over the Caldwell Theater a few years ago which led to CJM functioning as Clearview’s landlord). Who knows, I didn’t particularly dig this theater but it served as an occasional move over house for successful art films from Montclair.

Coate
Coate on May 12, 2010 at 6:58 pm

Yes, tlsloews, there are photos. Scroll up to my comment from Jan. 16, 2007, where you’ll find a link to a page of photos and ads.

CSWalczak
CSWalczak on May 12, 2010 at 1:58 pm

This theater is now closed: View link

pbubny
pbubny on January 17, 2007 at 3:43 am

If you visit Michael and Bill’s website and scroll through the year-by-year listings of New York-area 70mm engagements, you’ll see that the Cinema 23 actually had a 70mm festival in 1970, and also ran “2001” in 70mm. So the theatre didn’t have to upgrade to 70mm projection to book “Star Wars” in late ‘77, as I had thought at the time. The website also makes it clear that Cinema 23 was one of several NYC-area theatres outside Manhattan that were equipped for wide-gauge projection in the '60s or pre-“Star Wars” '70s, even if many of them rarely used this capability.

Incidentally, at one time there was another theatre known as Cinema 23—in Montague, NJ, in the northwestern part of the state. Anybody have info on that?

Knucklehead
Knucklehead on January 16, 2007 at 8:42 pm

Thank you Micheal Coate and Bill Kallay. WOW! What a COOL website you guys have. I expecially love the New York 70MM pages because I grew up in that area (well, OK, New Jersey) and have a hard time remembering whether something I saw was 70MM or not because I really didn’t know the technical details back then. Now I don’t have to worry about remembering cause you guys have documented it for me! I even found the answer to my E.T. question.

moviebuff82
moviebuff82 on January 16, 2007 at 3:57 pm

BTW, how was the screening of Star Wars at Cinema 23 compared with the Route 4 Tenplex? It must’ve been different because the screen was a bit smaller and the sound different. Does this theater still make money even though it’s facing competition from Kinnelon and Wayne?

Coate
Coate on January 16, 2007 at 1:48 pm

On our website, Bill Kallay and I have posted a page of photos and newspaper ads from the CINEMA 23. I took the photos a few years ago when I was visiting the NYC area. One of the ads is (in my opinion) a really cool one for the theatre’s upgrading of their sound system to accommodate a run of “Star Wars” (which I believe was a moveover of the ROUTE 4’s print).

View link

Knucklehead
Knucklehead on January 16, 2007 at 1:24 pm

This is the theater where I saw E.T. I don’t remember if it was shown in 70mil or Dolby 6 track or any thing. I do remember vividly that my dad cried at the end! I thought that was funny since I never saw him do that any other time.

pbubny
pbubny on December 2, 2005 at 4:28 am

One of the saddest chop-ups I’ve seen in a movie theatre. As a single-screen house, which at various times was owned by GCC and UA, this originally had a very large Panavision screen (although the aspect ratio only seemed to stretch to full 2.39:1 width in the last couple of years; before then, widescreen movies seemed to be projected at about 2.2:1) and a roomy, ‘60s vintage auditorium that probably seated about 800. For the first couple years that I went there, it was primarily a sub-run house, but then was modernized with 70mm projection and 6-track Dolby in time for Christmas 1977, when it played “Star Wars” to a packed house (it had played “Damnation Alley”—which was supposed to be 20th Century-Fox’s big sci-fi hit for '77, rather than the afterthought called “Star Wars”—in 4-track Dolby a couple months before). That sound system was always a little funny, though: it didn’t have good bass even in the subwoofer channel and the surrounds (all two of them) were always too obviously “on,” so that the sound coming from them didn’t blend with the sound coming from behind the screen. Even so, aside from this I never encountered subpar presentation there.

The last movie I saw in the original single-screen Cinema 23 was “Casualties of War” with Sean Penn and Michael J. Fox. Next time I went back was 1990, after it had been carved up into five very small closets. Even the “main” auditorium was tiny, and evidently none of the theatres had ‘scope screens (and from what I hear, still don’t). After two or three visits (I remember the two-hour “Pretty Woman” stretching out to two-and-a-half hours because the projector kept breaking down), I gave up on the place. It’s been operating ever since, so I assume it does business, but it won’t get any more of mine.

teecee
teecee on June 13, 2005 at 8:24 am

Clearview bought this cinema in 1997 from Jesse Sayegh of Cedar Grove.