National Theatre

10925 Lindbrook Drive,
Los Angeles, CA 90024

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Showing 651 - 675 of 757 comments

William
William on May 7, 2007 at 2:42 pm

National General Theatres was looking for a buyer at the time. With that purchase Mann Theatres of Minnesota picked-up Fox West Coast Theatres Corp.(also known as National General Theatres), Evergreen State Amusement Corp., Fox Inter-Mountain Theatres Corp., Fox Midwest Theatres Corp., Fox Eastern Theatres, Inc. and NT & T Amusement Corp. After a few years of operation(1975-1978), he started to drop under performing theatres from the circuit.

William
William on May 7, 2007 at 2:08 pm

No, it opened as a National General Theatre. The little round sign that sits on top of the National sign in the above picture, originally was the NG logo.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on May 7, 2007 at 1:57 pm

Was this a Mann theatre when it first opened?

JoelWeide
JoelWeide on May 7, 2007 at 1:52 pm

You bring an old question to my mind with your above comment. I used to work for the Mann circuit out of the district office in Wichita, Kansas, my question is; How exactly did Ted Mann come to purchase National General? That question has been debated for decades around ths part of the country. If anyone has an opinions or knows the history of the transaction, I for one would be interested in reading your opinions.

Thank you.

bruceanthony
bruceanthony on May 7, 2007 at 10:06 am

Mann theatres has lost its importance as a movie chain with the exception of a few select industry theatres. Like the old M-G-M its been reduced to a shadow of its former self. Ted Mann purchased the National General(Fox West Coast)chain back in the 1970’s which was a dominant player in LA until he sold the chain to Warner Bros/Paramount and its been downhill ever since. With the exception of the Chinese in Hollywood and Village in Westwood very little has been done to improve the circuit. Im surprised it hasn’t been sold to another theatre chain. Westwood has suffered the same decline as Mann theatres which was the dominant force in Westwood for years. Landmark is opening a state of the art multiplex at the Westside Pavillion which will not have a positive effect on Westwood Village.I just hope the Fox Village is saved at all costs.brucec

markinthedark
markinthedark on May 7, 2007 at 9:11 am

Too bad they didn’t keep it and book Spider Man 3 there, staggering showtimes with The Village.

HowardBHaas
HowardBHaas on May 7, 2007 at 8:36 am

I am going to guess that Mann is NOT, repeat NOT, reopening the theater. If it is going to reopen soon under a different operator, the newspaper ad is probably simply wrong. Often, the studios that place the ads mistakenly use the former name until they realize otherwise.

BradE41
BradE41 on May 7, 2007 at 8:25 am

Perhaps “Simms Entertainment” is going to lease the theatre, with Mann acting as a booking agent, and retaining the MANN name. Maybe MANN found a partner for the costs of running the theatre. Whatever the case, it is great it is coming back. There is plenty of film product coming this Summer, and the National should be ‘well booked’.

JSA
JSA on May 7, 2007 at 6:28 am

Michael: By all accounts, go forward with the article.

JSA

exit
exit on May 6, 2007 at 11:38 pm

Not to sound like an ingrate here, but we were kinda hoping the new owner would fix the place up… keep an eye on Mann’s (and other chain’s) website for Friday’s listings. So far the National is not on Mann’s website. PS Michael. of COURSE we’re all anxious to read what you’ve been working on.

Coate
Coate on May 6, 2007 at 11:30 pm

I was in Westwood today and walked by the theatre. A sign on display in the boxoffice window suggests the theatere indeed will re-open on Friday the 11th. Whether it’s being re-opened by Mann Theatres or another outfit, I couldn’t tell you at this time.

That’s great that the place will be re-opening, but it does create a problem of sorts since for the past couple of weeks Bill Kallay and I have been chipping away at a special tribute article. I guess now we’ll just have to hit the “delete” button! Kidding. I suppose we can still run the article if there’s any interest out there.

bporter
bporter on May 6, 2007 at 5:24 pm

There is an ad in today’s L.A. Times for “The Ex” that lists “Mann National” as one of the theatres it is opening in on Friday. Is this a misprint? Does this mean that Mann has gotten another extension on the lease, or is now sub-leasing it from “Simms Entertainment.” WTF!?!

markinthedark
markinthedark on May 5, 2007 at 2:51 pm

Adam has posted my closing night shots of the national on Cinematour.

http://www.cinematour.com/tour/us/2134.html

Damon Packard
Damon Packard on May 5, 2007 at 7:44 am

I worked at the National in ‘84-85 during engagements like Temple of Doom and Beverly Hills Cop, and saw many films there in the early 80’s (Brainstorm, Krull, Star Trek II, etc) it’s always been my favorite theatre of Westwood but this was the last heyday of Westwood, when movies were still an exciting and inspiring event. We’ve witnissed the death of single house cinema’s over the last 10-15 years and it’s been an inevitable slow death. At that time the manager was a young guy named Mac Carter, long time figure Harry Francis was at the Bruin (“paying customers aren’t complaining sir”) Famous LAPD cop Marc Fuhrman patrolled Westwood on foot and the theatres were rife with embezzlment I saw entire staff’s fired at several chains, ahh but that was the chaotic fun of the times and we had so much fun.
I spent a lot of time hanging out in the projection booth with the projectionist (Burt) admiring Doug Trumball’s 70mm showscan equipment, which they left there for years. Of course seeing anything in 70mm at the National was always a treat, at some point in the 90’s they basically wrote that theater off diverting first run movies to the Village or Bruin and sending dumb comedies or substandard fare to the National.
I don’t agree the theatre needed renovation, i personally liked the orange interior and curtains, what they needed were better movies, not a newly remodeled interior. And as for Spielberg saving the place, it’s a romantic notion but it’ll never happen. The true movie scene is dead, plain and simple, We don’t even have projectionsists left fer’ christ sakes! It can and never will be what it was, these are the last days, it’s over.
DP www.reflectionsofevil.com

markinthedark
markinthedark on May 5, 2007 at 2:46 am

Thats great news if it’s true. But if Mann couldn’t make it work…

russjones
russjones on May 4, 2007 at 10:52 pm

The National Theatre will re open on 11 May 2007. Unknown operator and feature.

exit
exit on April 26, 2007 at 2:45 pm

Jordan C – the Majestic Crest (as it’s now called) was renovated with Joeseph Musil’s design talent (similar to his work on the El Capitan) years before it was sold to Robert Bucksbaum, who has said it took his entire life savings to purchase the theatre. Mr. Bucksbaum’s passion for a small classic theatre did save the Crest, (which we all thank him for) but it it highly unlikely his pockets are deep enough to acquire and renovate the National.

I agree that parking is an obvious issue with running the National. That has apparently been the case for decades, for I met Patty Duke (Astin) in the summer of ‘74, when she and her family had a home in the area, and she said that after THE EXORCIST opened at the National, it was impossible to park anywhere in Westwood. I would imagine that solving the parking issue, perhaps in some kind of co-op deal with surrounding merchants, would be a key factor in the National’s future success. But I believe that, like challenge of running the theatre itself, the parking issue is not insurmountable.

exit
exit on April 26, 2007 at 2:22 pm

Michael, have you checked any further? We’ve seen print articles, (referenced here, i think) wherein Mann reps said that increased rent was the deciding issue for their exit, which indicates that the building is not theirs to sell. However, the rest of your report sure sounded promising…

jordan52777
jordan52777 on April 25, 2007 at 11:34 pm

I was only ten years old, but I could sware that the original “THX” promo during the opening weekend of “Empire of the Sun” at the National was the loudest I’ve ever heard. I also have fond memories of having a birthday party watching Crocodile Dundee II at the National with my friends, as well as seeing Misery, Beetlejuice, Species, Christmas Vacation and many others. It will be missed.

I still live in Westwood and work out at LA Fitness (about a block from the National) several times a week. I’ll keep an eye out and post any noticable changes to the theater on this site.

A couple random thoughts:

-Wasn’t the Crest purchased and restored by some passionate independant investor a while back? Perhaps this person be looking at assuming the National as well?

-The corner that the National sits on is relativly quiet and parking is sparce. The Circuit City accross the street went out of business a few years back after Best Buy came to town, and the huge DSW shoe store that opened recently in it’s place always seems empty. I can’t see the National being converted into some big-box retail store and being too successful. Quite honestly, I can envision that space sitting vacant for years unless someone reopens it as a theater.

Flix70
Flix70 on April 25, 2007 at 4:27 pm

Sad to say I saw only one movie there – an advance screening of Just Cause in ‘95. Let’s just say I was more impressed with the theater than the film. Wish I had made it back before the closure. I did see Zodiac and thought it looked familiar.

BradE41
BradE41 on April 25, 2007 at 1:37 pm

The National really did not need much renovation. But I really think new seats were in order. Also something needed to be done to the dirty ceiling, a fresh outside paint job, and a new sign.

As far as an extensive renovation, I do not think a big overhaul was needed. Back in 2002 they were planning to do a major overhaul, but they changed their minds. Probably because what they had planned was too expensive, and I think the asbestos had to be removed and was costly.

William
William on April 24, 2007 at 5:54 pm

Many of the older properties that Mann Theatres held where leased like the Village and Bruin. Some of the properties the company leased were owned by the Skouras family.

markinthedark
markinthedark on April 24, 2007 at 5:48 pm

As much as the National is in need of an upgrade comfort-wise, there is a part of me that likes it the way it is. It is a perfectly preserved represtation of its era for design etc. As I look through my photos I took, the ones of the front row seats make me think that at some time some fan sat in that chair to see the latest Indiana Jones in 70mm. I know that it is probably not viable to preserve the theatre as is, but it has character and a real sense of time. The kind of place that many of us growing up in the 70’s and 80’s learned to love (and want to work in) movies.

BradE41
BradE41 on April 24, 2007 at 5:28 pm

I think Mann theatres owned the National back when Ted Mann owned the chain. Simms Entertainment? I hope it is true that it stays open as a movie theatre. Maybe they could put some money into getting new seats. It would be weird it not being a “Mann” theatre, but I am all for it being utilized as a working movie theatre.

markinthedark
markinthedark on April 24, 2007 at 5:11 pm

But I thought it wasn’t Mann’s to sell. Were they not leasing it?