Brentwood 1 & 2

2524 Wilshire Boulevard,
Santa Monica, CA 90403

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Additional Info

Previously operated by: Cineplex Odeon

Previous Names: Cine Latino

Nearby Theaters

Brentwood 1 & 2

Located in the Brentwood section of Santa Monica. The Brentwood 1 & 2 was once a bowling alley and was later converted into a twin theatre opening on July 1, 1970. It was showing second run features and double features in the 1970’s. On March 26, 1978 it was renamed Cine Latino screening Spanish language movies.

In the early-1980’s Cineplex Odeon used it as a first run theatre until it closed in 1990 after a wave of multiplexes (including a new Cineplex fourplex) on the Third Street promenade opened.

It was used for retail space, but has since been demolished.

Contributed by B Erickson, Ray Martinez

Recent comments (view all 17 comments)

William
William on July 6, 2006 at 8:28 am

The El Miro/Cine Latino closed around October 1987. So it must have been sometime in 1988. It was an independent theatre before Cineplex took over operations.

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on March 19, 2008 at 10:22 pm

Looks like the status on this one should have been changed to closed/demolished a while ago. I will be around there tomorrow, but the posts from two years ago don’t leave much doubt.

Damon Packard
Damon Packard on March 2, 2009 at 3:25 am

ahh the Brentwood Twins, i lived right around the corner from the theater back in ‘82-83 and used to sneak in every night. I spent most of my life in this theater during those years watching “Blade Runner, The Thing, Empire Strikes Back (re-release) and everything else that played there those years over and over for weeks/months. It was the easiest theater to sneak into as the exit doors were always slightly ajar with generally few people inside. Cheap, run down, sticky floors, and the employees/floor staff were completely non present. I vividly remember during a late afternoon showing of "Sword and the Sorcerer” (which i also saw there a couple dozen times) a drug-connection friend of a friend i was with came thru the always-open exit doors right in the middle of the film, stood in the middle of the screen and started yelling out my friends name “Marc Maaarc..!!” Luckily there were only 2 or 3 other people in the theatre but it was quite embarrassing. Those were crazy days. Many memories of this theater.

mweston
mweston on July 28, 2009 at 3:37 am

I was the Projectionist at this theater for several years during the 80s. It wasn’t anything fancy, but it wasn’t a bad theater, and it did some good business as I remember. The staff was non present because there was a lot of partying in that place! The theater had Cinemechanica projectors, pretty good projectors in my opinion. Cinema 1 had a V-18 tower projector (13,000 ft reel), 2 had two V8 projectors (6 thousand foot reels, changeovers.) Back in the day the only theaters in Santa Monica were the Brentwood Twins, Wilshire Twins and the Aero. Both the Aero and the Brentwood twins were 2nd run, the Wilshire first run.

William
William on July 28, 2009 at 9:06 am

You forgot the Monica Twin.

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on August 5, 2009 at 12:28 am

Here is an October 1977 ad from the LA Times:
http://tinyurl.com/m4hapv

kencmcintyre
kencmcintyre on August 23, 2009 at 7:38 pm

Here is a profile that was in the LA Times, also in October 1977:

BRENTWOOD I & II 2524 Wilshire Blvd, Santa Monica 829-3366

Three months ago, proprietor Gene Rosenthal began showing older-often classic-films on one of his screens to complement the current commercial fare on the other. The result has been attendance from a cross-section of the community-senior citizens to youngsters-all drawn by programming that varies from science fiction to nostalgia.

The bill changes twice weekly and focuses on “in-depth classics”, that is older films, rather then on the more current alternative movies shown at some of the other theaters. A recent Brentwood attraction was “My Man Godfrey” and “His Girl Friday”. There were also a few days of Harold Lloyd films. The theater was a bowling alley when Rosenthal took it over eight years ago.

LarryDickman
LarryDickman on January 30, 2011 at 6:41 pm

My first visit to the Brentwood Twins was in the fall of ’70, for the mind-frying double bill of “Trog” (wacky missing link madness with Joan Crawford) and Hammer Films’ “Taste the Blood of Dracula.” This was to be the first of many visits to this no-frills but family-friendly neighborhood twin, where if I recall correctly Screen I (to the left as you entered) was the smaller house. As was common in the early ‘70s, local movie houses sometimes offered the same grindhouse fare found in urban markets, and the Brentwood was no exception. Over the next seven years or so the venue hosted such psychotronic classics as the British terror anthology “Tales that Witness Madness,” the Stella Stevens horror-comedy “Arnold,” the cult cannibal shocker “The Folks at Red Wolf Inn,” Piper Laurie as “Ruby,” Hammer’s “Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter” with “Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell,” William Castle’s “Bug,” the Borgnine/Shatner/Travolta glop-fest “The Devil’s Rain” (paired with Hammer’s “The Devil’s Bride”; give that booker a cigar!), “Straw Dogs,” “Breakheart Pass,” “Death Wish,” “Freebie and the Bean,” Ron Leibman and Beau Bridges in the forgotten “Your Three Minutes Are Up,” the Burton/Taylor/Bridges oddity “Hammersmith is Out,” Peter Sellars’ hospital laff-riot “Where Does It Hurt?,” Omar Sharif in “The Mysterious Island of Captain Nemo,” “Billy Jack” and the unforgettable “Mandingo.” Mainstream hits with repeat bookings included “The Poseidon Adventure,” “The Hot Rock,” “Chinatown,” and “Jeremiah Johnson.” I was spellbound by two great French thrillers when the theatre entered its art house/revival phase in ’77 and showed Clouzot’s “The Wages of Fear” with “Diabolique.” I believe the prints were 16mm, but I was terrified nonetheless. In either late ’81 or early ’82, it seemed that someone at the theatre was eager to support the area’s up and coming acting talent: when “Taps” played, below the title the marquee read ‘Sean Penn as Dwyer’. What corporate multiplex these days would give that kind of shout-out? My last visit was in ’88, for a near-empty screening of “The Untouchables.” Before long the Brentwood’s doors shut for good, closing another chapter in friendly neighborhood moviegoing…

rivest266
rivest266 on August 5, 2016 at 7:00 pm

July 1st, 1970 grand opening ad in photo section

rivest266
rivest266 on March 14, 2021 at 3:21 pm

This reopened as Cine Latino on March 26th, 1978. Grand opening ad posted.

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