IFC Center

323 6th Avenue,
New York, NY 10003

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John Fink
John Fink on June 19, 2005 at 8:00 pm

The spirit of the center is to show independent films, its bold of them to showcase short alternative works before the feature (Real Art Ways in Hartford also does this as well). IFC Center is alright, the seats you have to say are the most exciting thing ab out the place.

I was there on Friday night to see Me and You and Everyone We Know, in theatre 1, the main screen, which was projected in HD (the only theatre in the country to be showing the feature this way verses 35MM). The loby has kinda of a cheesy modified theme to it, diffinatly unexciting, a small snack bar in the corner. The bathrooms are downstairs, the design there is very cool, like going to a trendy urban cafe or club.

I didn’t venture downstairs or to the cafe. The projectionists deminstration outside caused the line for the mainhouse to be kept inside (funny thing is that neighborhood is noisy enough without the protest). The mainhouse is pretty nice, and a bonus for most fans of this site: it has a curtain!

Weirdly though this house isn’t even remotly affliated with Clearview Cinemas in the least (I was thinking for a time it would have been Clearview Cinemas IFC Center), they had Coke instead of Clearview’s cola brand, Pepsi. Bold of Cablevision to now be opperating two unaffliated cinemas within the same company. Maybe this means IFC Center will have a shot at expanding in to other markets. Let’s hope, this place is important (despite being in a loud bar-filled neighborhood).

JackM
JackM on June 19, 2005 at 3:27 pm

Wellllll: the 250 movies-in-theaters a year guy went to IFC on Saturday night and is quick to report that the 50 seat theatre on the second floor of the IFC north building (above former Whitey’s Bar) is very comfortable and a great spot to sit.

Sorry to say the print of Pennybakers “Don’t Look Back” wouldn’t run. John Vanco, the theaters GM, showed admirable grace and issued both rain checks and a refund. Teriffic.

One dislike: Someone has decided to program a short film before the feature of “Don’t Look Back” and Vanco, in his before the program welcome, said such shorts are planned as regular program scheduule items.

This particular short, a small yapping dog and his unseen master, is an example of the various classes of sophomoric navel gazing that often is a feature of “independant” movies and is a painful distraction from the pleasant experince of the theater and anticipation of the feature to come.

I’d rather watch ads that this stuff. At least one can ignore ads, nearly impossible with a yapping dog.

By the way, IFC is suffering a theatre-front demonstration by the projectionist union that includeds a giant inflatable rat perched on the curb and chanting demonstrators, presumably members of the union.

If anyone knows a member of the union, please advise the person about how silly they look whining there on the curb, projecting their protectionist mantra. It’s not our fault they were duped by the union sales pitch and we object to the rude intrusion upon our lives.

br91975
br91975 on June 17, 2005 at 5:39 pm

Stupid me – in all my excitement, I posted the Daily News article twice; my bad and my apologies…

br91975
br91975 on June 17, 2005 at 4:30 pm

…and from yesterday’s Daily News:

New route to indies
stops in West Village
By JOE NEUMAIER
DAILY NEWS FEATURE WRITER
Thursday, June 16th, 2005

Manhattan is getting a new house of movie worship.

Opening tomorrow, the IFC Center in the former Waverly Theater at Sixth Ave. and Fourth St. – the building was erected as a church in 1831 – will be the brick-and-mortar home of the Independent Film Channel and will be Manhattan’s most modern indie cinema.

Three state-of-the-art theaters will show first-run movies, a retro film series, weekend repertory screenings, midnight movies and occasional double-bill nights.

The opening-night fare includes two screens showing “Me and You and Everyone We Know,” a hit at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, and the classic 1967 Bob Dylan documentary “Don’t Look Back.” The first midnight showing in a “New York After Dark” program is the 1980 horror film “Maniac.”

“If you define the West Village as between Houston and 14th St. and west of Sixth Ave., there actually aren’t any movie theaters in that area,” says John Vanco, vice president and general manager of the Center. “It’s perfect to support the types of programs we’re doing. We can show lots of great and crazy stuff.”

The former Waverly Theater opened in 1937. Midnight showings of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” began shortly after that camp classic’s debut in 1975, sparking a nationwide trend of late-night shows for costumed crowds. “Rocky Horror” itself may be revived at IFC this fall.

“Throughout, the theater is a [combination of] the old and the new, and we’ll maintain that in our programs,” Vanco says.

But filmgoers may get most excited by the wide aisles and huge seats (imported from theaters in Cannes) and the lack of commercials before movies. There will trailers for upcoming IFC Center movies and new 5-minute short films – but no TV-type ads.

“Audiences don’t want to buy a ticket and sit through commercials, and we made a specific decision to lose two rows of seats in each of the three theaters to get more leg room and comfort,” says Vanco. “We want this to be indie film’s Radio City.”

br91975
br91975 on June 17, 2005 at 4:25 pm

This week’s issue of Time Out New York (to absolutely no surprise whatsoever) features a profile of the IFC Center…

New Waverly -
The IFC Center brightens a legendary darkened theater
By Darren D'Addario

The famed Waverly Theater in Greenwich Village went dark in 2001, but its West 3rd Street block has changed so drastically in the meantime that it feels as if the cinema’s been shuttered since the early years of the Beame administration. Not exactly upscale to begin with, the stretch has become a destination for those seeking tattoos, body piercings, sex toys and hot dogs at “inflation-busting prices.” But the street will receive a welcome jolt of culture when the Waverly is reborn on Friday 17 as the IFC Center.

A property of Cablevision’s Rainbow Media Holdings, which also owns the IFC cable channel and film distribution and production companies, the beautifully appointed complex will be home to a trio of theaters (with 220, 120 and 60 seats, respectively) showing first-run indies and revivals, a luxe cafe and editing suites available to filmmakers.

Despite the street’s characteristic seediness, IFC Center VP and general manager John Vanco (formerly of Cowboy Pictures) says that the theater’s location is one of the key reasons he’s so excited about its prospects. “I’m not as concerned about the block as some other people are,” he says. “I really think it’s a tremendous location. The West 4th Street subway station is on everybody’s way to something. When I used to do the booking for the Screening Room (on Varick Street), we did a lot of fun series that I was excited about, but…it was like a tree falling in the forest. Nobody wanted to go down there.”

The IFC Center will, however, join an already-crowded downtown art-house scene that includes Film Forum, Anthology Film Archives, Landmark Sunshine, the Angelika and numerous other venues. In order to stand out from the competition, Vanco plans to book significant short works with each feature, curate an edgy midnight-movie series (William Lustig’s Maniac will be the first title) and have filmmakers be as involved as possible with their films' showings. A week before the IFC was to open with Miranda July’s excellent Me and You and Everyone We Know, Vanco announced that a restored 35mm print of Don’t Look Back would be getting a two-week revival also beginning Friday 17, with documentarian D.A. Pennebaker making appearances.

“I don’t think we’re ever going to consolidate into a single identity,” Vanco says. “We’re definitely going to be different things to different people, and I think that diversity is going to serve us.”

chconnol
chconnol on June 16, 2005 at 12:00 pm

The Village Voice piece points out (very well) the concerns of film go-ers, namely that the IFC Center will become a corporate run institution rather than a truly open place where independent films can be seen and appreciated.

Sorry but my cynical self tells me that this place is going to reek of selling out. Oh it’ll try very, very hard to look hip and “in” but it will only appeal to a bull**** “chic” crowd and the real movie lovers won’t go there.

Give me the Thalia’s and even Theater 80 St. Marks place for God’s sake. As pitiful as some of the presentations were at those places, they were run by people who did it for the LOVE of movies. The so called Indpendent film movement has become nothing but another way to make money. Only they drape it all in this pseudo anti-establishment look thinking they’re fooling anyone.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on June 16, 2005 at 11:28 am

I’ve never been to this location, but I very much want to see this succeed. If it works, perhaps it will spawn worthy imitators in other cities?

br91975
br91975 on June 16, 2005 at 11:16 am

Another report on the IFC Center, this one courtesy of the Daily News (the best news in this piece being that ‘Rocky Horror’ might be ‘returning’ to the IFC come fall – yay!):

New route to indies
stops in West Village

By JOE NEUMAIER
DAILY NEWS FEATURE WRITER

John Vanco manages the IFC Center, opening tomorrow on Sixth Ave. in the Village.

Manhattan is getting a new house of movie worship.

Opening tomorrow, the IFC Center in the former Waverly Theater at Sixth Ave. and Fourth St. – the building was erected as a church in 1831 – will be the brick-and-mortar home of the Independent Film Channel and will be Manhattan’s most modern indie cinema.

Three state-of-the-art theaters will show first-run movies, a retro film series, weekend repertory screenings, midnight movies and occasional double-bill nights.

The opening-night fare includes two screens showing “Me and You and Everyone We Know,” a hit at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, and the classic 1967 Bob Dylan documentary “Don’t Look Back.” The first midnight showing in a “New York After Dark” program is the 1980 horror film “Maniac.”

“If you define the West Village as between Houston and 14th St. and west of Sixth Ave., there actually aren’t any movie theaters in that area,” says John Vanco, vice president and general manager of the Center. “It’s perfect to support the types of programs we’re doing. We can show lots of great and crazy stuff.”

The former Waverly Theater opened in 1937. Midnight showings of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” began shortly after that camp classic’s debut in 1975, sparking a nationwide trend of late-night shows for costumed crowds. “Rocky Horror” itself may be revived at IFC this fall.

“Throughout, the theater is a [combination of] the old and the new, and we’ll maintain that in our programs,” Vanco says.

But filmgoers may get most excited by the wide aisles and huge seats (imported from theaters in Cannes) and the lack of commercials before movies. There will trailers for upcoming IFC Center movies and new 5-minute short films – but no TV-type ads.

“Audiences don’t want to buy a ticket and sit through commercials, and we made a specific decision to lose two rows of seats in each of the three theaters to get more leg room and comfort,” says Vanco. “We want this to be indie film’s Radio City.”

Greenpoint
Greenpoint on June 15, 2005 at 11:06 pm

Bryan,
Thank you for answering my question.

Greenpoint
Greenpoint on June 15, 2005 at 10:03 pm

Thankyou Ross Melnick, for that awesome picture of the old Waverly.
Does anyone know if IFC is going to use the name Waverly in the new theatres name?

Greenpoint
Greenpoint on June 15, 2005 at 10:00 pm

My first movie ever there was in 1979ish, it was Peter Sellers last
film- they found him dead soon after- “Fu Manchu” was the name of the movie -or some derivation there-of.

I am happy to have an opportunity to see movies there again…I think the last time I seen a movie at the Waverly was in 2000, that was the Blues Brothers 2000…it was in the lower level…then I seen some movie with Stephen Bauer (Manny from Scarface ‘83) there also.

Last year I seen exterior work being done including the demolition
of the marquis and facade.I said to myself “Oh No- these real-estate developers want to close down another theatre”

But Thankfully thats not the case.

RobertR
RobertR on June 15, 2005 at 4:18 pm

I played Shock Treatment on Long Island by advertising it as Rocky Horror 2. Most people who came liked it.

br91975
br91975 on June 15, 2005 at 12:51 am

As noted in the article above, the main opening feature at the IFC Center will be ‘Me and You and Everyone We Know’ on all three screens.

br91975
br91975 on June 15, 2005 at 12:48 am

Another profile of the IFC Center, this one courtesy of the June 20th issue of New York Magazine…

Art-House Showdown
The spanking-new (brand-extending! Welsh-rarebit-serving!) IFC Center stomps into downtownâ€"and sends rivals into a competitive tizzy.

By Logan Hill

First, the Today show opened a storefront studio to lure screaming tourists. Then MTV plopped TRL in Times Square to lure screaming teens. And on June 17, the Independent Film Channel will open its shiny new IFC Center to lure screamingâ€"well, whisperingâ€"cineasts.

The old Waverly Theater on West 3rd and Sixth Avenue, sung about in Hair and famous for launching the Rocky Horror Picture Show midnight feature, is now a beautifully refurbished cinemaâ€"and a powerful branding tool, too. Inside, there are three theaters (210, 110, and 65 seats)â€"with great sight lines, big, comfy chairs (“imported from France!”), and high-definition digital projection. The cinema’s largest theater will be one of New York’s most impressive, with exposed brick and violet ambient lighting. The Waverly’s drop-ceiling has been ripped away to expose the vaulted, 50-plus-foot ceiling of a church, originally built in 1831. Upstairs, there are two film-editing suites; next door is a restaurant serving “Welsh rarebit, artisan Lancashire, double-smoked rashers.” In the lobby, downtown’s Posteritati gallery will exhibit vintage posters, while the concession stand serves “organic popcorn with rosemary butter.”

John Vanco, a veteran of Cowboy Pictures, Miramax, and New Yorker Films, will program a mix of indies, arties, foreign films, and documentaries. And, unlike his mainstream counterpartsâ€"which subject audiences to a barrage of adsâ€"Vanco will screen a digital short film before features. A monthly programming series touts guest curators like novelist Jonathan Lethem; a nebulous “advisory board” includes Steven Soderbergh and Alfonso Cuarón. Vanco says the theater will screen restorations of classicsâ€"“for the Criterion geeks”â€"beginning with Japanese icon Yasujiro Ozu. And a midnight series pays tribute to the theater’s Rocky Horror history, beginning with William Lustig’s notoriously violent Maniac.

But on June 17, all three screens will open with Miranda July’s terrific Me and You and Everyone We Know. On the heels of that film’s Cannes awards, the opening is “a perfect storm,” says IFC Entertainment president Jonathan Sehringâ€"an acclaimed release produced and distributed by IFC, showcasing the Center’s synergistic ambitions. “This was really the vision of Jim Dolan, the CEO of Cablevision,” says Sehringâ€"not the first thing you’d expect to hear about an art house. But it’s true.

The IFC Center isn’t that independent, of course. It’s owned by IFC Entertainment (the IFC network, IFC Films), which is a subsidiary of Rainbow Media (AMC channel, MSG), which is a subsidiary of Cablevisionâ€"which owns the Knicks and the Clearview Cinemas chain that let the Waverly lapse into disrepair in the first place. Cablevision held on to the lease, and Dolan saw an opportunity.

“The directive was, Make it IFC’s Radio City,” says Sehring. A top-notch movie theater, in other words, that could launch art films into the great ’burbs beyond, via Dolan’s cable channels and video-on-demand. “The independent-film distribution model is broken,” says Sehring. To fix it, IFC aspires to release small films with just one wave of ads and reviews, “instead of A markets, B markets, C markets.” The old At the Angelika show will now be shot here and rebranded At the IFC; Jon Favreau’s chat show Dinner for Five, Sehring says, will likely be filmed in the IFC restaurant. These are major advantages in the country’s most competitive art-house market, where distributors are willing to screen small films at only one theater per zoneâ€"in this case, Manhattan below 14th Street.

“If you wrote the IFC Center off to a marketing cost,” Sehring says, “it would still be a great marketing vehicle.”

This is not a luxury that many other art houses enjoy. “For the consumer, it’s very good, but it puts the rest of us at a disadvantage,” says Quad Cinema director Elliott Kanbar. “It’s like Rupert Murdoch bankrolling the Post. Now IFC, the Angelika, and the Sunshine are going to compete viciously for the same films.”

The Sunshine, of course, has its own corporate help. It’s owned by Landmark, the biggest art-house chain in the countryâ€"which in turn is owned by Mark Cuban’s 2929 Entertainment, a rival to Cablevision (2929 just brokered a deal with IFC’s adviser Steven Soderbergh to distribute six of the director’s new films, cross-platform, simultaneously).

This leaves the Angelika, owned by the L.A. developer Reading, relatively exposed. “I know IFC’s opening a little later than they hoped,” insinuates the Angelika’s director, Terri Moore. “And I understand they’ll have a café, like we do. People always model success. It’s flattering. But a generation of directors and producers have dreamed of opening at the Angelika.”

A generation of filmgoers have also heard the rumble of the subway underneath. “The subway is part of the charm,” Moore says. “We’re very established,” she adds, noting the theater’s “high-traffic area, the great vibeâ€"the new Crate & Barrel, all that.” I mention the branded TV spots IFC took away. “We have been approached to do similar television spots,” Moore says. “We can do anything they can do, too.”

But when I bring up IFC’s support from Cablevision and Sunshine’s synergy with 2929, Moore backtracks, saying, “We’re focusing on what we do well. Our audience are purists; they’re not interested in bells and whistles.” The Angelika’s reputation is its strength, after all: “What we offer, you can’t buy. You can try to copy it all your life.”

Vanco understands such concernsâ€"and dismisses them outright, noting that attempts at one-studio theaters have failed before (Fine Line and the Thalia; Miramax and the Gotham). “We’re looking at the long term, and a theater like this needs to be run right to build credibility. Right now, we’re the new kid in town; our seats are fluffy and perfect,” he says. “The floors will have scuff marks soon enough.”

“It’s like Rupert Murdoch bankrolling the ‘Post.’ Now the IFC, the Angelika, and the Sunshine will compete viciously for the same films.”

The IFC, with new digs and leverage, may be able to steal some films from its competitors. The summer’s highest-profile American independent, Jim Jarmusch’s Broken Flowers, is still in play. But the Landmark Sunshine has booked the summer’s most anticipated foreign release, Wong Kar Wai’s 2046, and Film Forum’s legendary repertory list will be very hard to beat. Smaller houses like the Quad and Cinema Village are at the greatest disadvantage, but while they lack big backers, they’ll never feel the pressure to book an orphan supported by a corporate partner.

“It’s going to take guts and gumption,” says another programmer, “for John Vanco to turn down stuff that his parent company would like to see at the Center.”

br91975
br91975 on June 14, 2005 at 5:03 pm

The Village Voice takes a look at the IFC Center…

New Waverly
IFC indahouse: A Village theater reopens, but not without controversy

by Matthew Ross

The Waverly Theater, at Sixth Avenue and West 4th Street, will forever be known as the movie house that, in 1976, kicked off the most enduring cult classic in cinema history when it began midnight screenings of an unsuccessful 20th Century Fox release called The Rocky Horror Picture Show. Its recent legacy hasn’t been so memorable. In the ‘80s and '90s, the Waverly was bought and sold several times, divided from one grand balcony theater into twin screens; in 2001, it was shut down by its parent company, Cablevision, owner of the Clearview Cinemas chain.

While local cinephiles saw the Waverly’s shuttered marquee as another sad relic of the city’s once thriving art house scene, another Cablevision subsidiaryâ€"the Independent Film Channelâ€"has been working to restore the institution as a force in New York film culture. On June 17, after three and a half years of renovations and delays, the IFC Center will finally open its doors to the public with the premiere of Miranda July’s Me and You and Everyone We Know, a film produced and distributed by IFC that won prizes at Sundance and Cannes.

The center is the brainchild of IFC Entertainment president Jonathan Sehring, who originally envisioned it as an “IFC version of Radio City,” complete with a production facility and film school. Those plans were scaled back considerably, although two editing suites have been installed upstairs. The old Waverly, however, has been given the full makeover, one that should impress even the most hardcore theater snob. The 220-seat main screen and the 120-seat balcony theater have been tricked out with plush seating and state-of-the-art projection booths. IFC also expanded into the old leather goods building next door, adding a third 70-seat theater and a restaurant.

Managing the center is John Vanco, a highly regarded specialty film veteran whose distribution company, Cowboy Pictures, closed in 2003 and whom Sehring had been courting since the project’s inception. Vanco plans to combine high-profile first-run releases with a repertory calendar that he will program himself. Other special events, including monthly movie nights with guest curators, are also scheduled. All features will be preceded by shorts.

“When I think about what I want this theater to be and how I want us to interact with the people in this neighborhood, I think about the Lincoln Plaza and the Film Forum,” says Vanco. “At those theaters, people will show up on a Tuesday or Friday night and just see what they haven’t seen, because if it’s there they know it’s going to be good. What that means is that the identity of the theater in many cases supersedes the identity of the films. Ultimately, that’s what we like to do. We want to give people a reason not to have another Netflix evening.” While Vanco admits that IFC productions and releases will get preferential treatment, he insists that the center will not serve as a mere clearinghouse for IFC titles.

So far, reaction among the New York film community seems supportive if a bit wary. “We’re all dividing up a pie, but it’s a very big pie,” says Film Forum director Karen Cooper. “Knowing John I’m sure they’ll show good films, and I welcome him back to the business. I want to be very clear that I’m not being hostile, but I think it’s important to note that people have to make compromises when they’re part of a larger enterprise, especially if those enterprises have an interest in producing and distributing films.” To help ensure the center’s street cred, Sehring has lined up an advisory board that includes Steven Soderbergh, Richard Linklater, John Sayles, Errol Morris, and Rebecca Miller. “Someone will always complain about corporations trying to brand independent filmmaking,” says Sehring. “All I can say to that is, we’re not trying to corporatize anyone’s vision, especially not the filmmakers we work with.”

Mark Urman, head of independent distributor THINKFilm’s theatrical division, says that “we can’t ignore that this is a multimedia conglomerate trying to expand their brand,” but is willing to cut IFC and Vanco some slack for now. “John maintains he’s not simply going to be shilling for the channel, and I think we have to take him at his word. If he programs with a real sense of what the audience likes, there literally cannot be a downside. Manhattan has been woefully underscreened for a long timeâ€"we need more theaters like this, plain and simple.”

One potential source of controversy surrounding the center became apparent at last week’s opening gala. A group of picketers from IATSE Local 306 gathered outside and handed out leaflets denouncing IFC’s decision not to pursue a contract with union projectionists. “We’re not trying to get jobs where none existedâ€"we had people at the old Waverly, and we have people at every one of the other theaters in Greenwich Village,” union president Michael Goucher told the Voice on Monday. “No one can say at this point how it will resolve, but we presume we’re putting some pressure on them. The picketing is going to give them a black eye, especially in a neighborhood like Greenwich Village.” IFC declined to comment.

br91975
br91975 on June 12, 2005 at 9:36 pm

The official opening programs at the IFC Center:

  • Miranda July’s ‘Me and You and Everyone We Know’, with appearances by the director at select showtimes;
  • D.A. Pennebaker’s ‘Don’t Look Back’ (in a new 35mm print), with appearances by the director at select showtimes;
  • William Lustig’s ‘Maniac’ (also in a new 35mm print), showing Friday 6.17 and Saturday 6.18 at midnight, with a special appearance by the director; and,
  • Yasujiro Ozu’s ‘I Was Born, But…’, in an archival print, screening Saturday 6.18 and Sunday 6.19 at noon, with an introduction by subtitler Linda Hoaglund and live accompaniment by longtime musician and silent film composer Donald Sosin.

Additional members of the IFC Advisory Board include Toronto International Film Festival Co-Director Noah Cowan, film publicity guru Cynthia Swartz, and New Yorker Films founder Dan Talbot. (And if they or someone they know have an opening for an intelligent film buff and aspiring screenwriter and producer… but, ah, I’m getting ahead of myself… )

br91975
br91975 on June 12, 2005 at 9:18 pm

The IFC Center was the subject of an ad on page 24 of the Arts & Leisure section of today’s NY Times. The text mentions that ‘the historic Waverly Theater is now the new IFC Center, the ultimate entertainment space for New Yorkers seeking out the best in independent film.’

Among the noted selling points:

  • ‘Waverly at IFC Center’, a full service restaurant featuring chefs Claudia Fleming and Gerry Hayden;
  • Three state-of-the-art cinemas with luxurious seating featuring high-def digital and 35mm projection;
  • The showing of new independent, foreign, and documentary features;
  • ‘Waverly Midnights’ starting June 17th – “New York After Dark”;
  • ‘Weekend Classics’ starting June 18th – “The World of Yasujiro Ozu”;
  • ‘Movie Night’ – July 7th – Jonathan Letham, guest curator;
  • ‘Short Attention Span Cinema’ – Short Films by Jeff Scher;
  • ‘Posteritati Gallery at IFC Center’ – Vintage movie posters; and…
  • …NO COMMERCIALS! (emphasis purely mine)

The IFC Center Advisory Board Members are Alfonso Cuaron, Richard Linklater, Rebecca Miller, Errol Morris, John Sayles, Kevin Smith, Steven Soderbergh, and Gary Winick. The web site of the IFC Center is http://www.ifccenter.com and the IFC Center’s phone number is 212.924.7771.

JackM
JackM on June 12, 2005 at 9:04 am

…. and IFC, apparently, agrees with you. “Waverly” is included in the name of the bar formerly known as “Whiteys” that IFC has annexed and is now a feature of the gussied-up theater. I salute managmement’s perspicacity for the installation of the bar though I opine its gonna be somewhat more than an uphill battle.

According to www tidbits unearthed “Waverly” should summon the image of a tree lined meadow in Merry Olde England. Hmmmmmm …. I suppose the pierced and tatooed daytrippers that populate the block COULD think they are visiting a tree lined meadow. The block does sorta feel that way to me.

We’ll ask Larry Alaimo, who knows more about the Waverly and the block than anyone.

Mike (saps)
Mike (saps) on June 12, 2005 at 3:39 am

I say stick with Waverly for a little while longer.

JackM
JackM on June 10, 2005 at 5:25 pm

I agree with you, Mr. Newman. Lets consign “Waverly” to the dustbin of history. No doubt many will wish to use the name but I aint one of them. As long as we have Larry Alaimo and terrific, well priced popcorn, we’ll be happy with the future.

Now: howbout the outdoor screenings in Cornelia Street yard?

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on June 10, 2005 at 4:38 pm

Is it time to rename this theatre in the CinemaTreasures database?

br91975
br91975 on June 10, 2005 at 4:35 pm

The new IFC Center continues to get ink, including some from across the pond (courtesy of The Guardian newspaper)…

Naomi Watts Celebrates IFC Center Opening

Friday June 10, 2005 5:46 PM

NEW YORK (AP) – Naomi Watts, along with Harvey Weinstein, John Sayles, Alfonso Cuaron and 400 movie-lovers, celebrated the grand opening of the Independent Film Channel’s new independent cinema hub.

Watts, 36, was nominated for an Oscar for her role in 2003’s “21 Grams.” Her screen credits also include “Mulholland Dr.,” “The Ring” and the upcoming “King Kong,” directed by Peter Jackson and also starring Jack Black and Adrien Brody.

Located in the former Waverly Theater and an adjacent building in Greenwich Village, the IFC Center houses three theaters, two editing suites and a restaurant and bar. The 10,140-square-foot space combines painted exposed brick, stadium-style seating, tinted concrete floors and the Waverly’s original marquee, which has been restored.

The grand opening was held Thursday night.

IFC hopes the center will serve as a focal point for the indie film community.

The monthly TV series on new independent films, “At the Angelika,” will now be titled, “At the IFC Center” and will be hosted at the center, which opens to the public June 17 with screenings of “Me and You and Everyone We Know.”

Ken Roe
Ken Roe on June 6, 2005 at 10:22 pm

I stopped by today and took several exterior photos. The facade has been ‘modernised’ by having steel skin attached to it. The marquee now gives a re-opening date of 17th June 2005.

John Fink
John Fink on June 1, 2005 at 10:10 pm

retractable roof, typo, sorry. And, too natrual fiber seats. If you look on the page that Ron Newman posted theres sure to be articles about how “brillent” his ideas were.

Atleast The Bridge in Phildephia is a great theatre, despite not having the Sundance name, indie films, the confrence center, the jazz bar, the natrual fiber seats (that weren’t fire resistant!) and the retractable roof.

Ron Newman
Ron Newman on June 1, 2005 at 6:07 pm

Yeah but look, Redford’s about to try it again. I hope it works out better this time.