![]() Friday-Monday, July 1-4.Īn outdoor screening of Apocalypse Now should be a surefire way for Cartopia carts to get a boost on their vegetarian fare… Cartopia. Luckily, Jaws is returning to screens to show her what she should really be afraid of. Opens Thursday, July 30.īlake Lively's currently fending off a gigantic CGI shark in The Shallows. You know, if the Army's really like they make it look in Stripes, sign me up! Wait, it's still like that, right? Mission Theater. Network: In which a cautionary 1976 satire of media blowhardery slowly transitions into a prophetic vision in 30 short years. 7:30 pm Friday-Saturday, 3:30 pm Sunday, July 1-3. In a post Brock Turner world, the already skeevy campus sexual politics of the Bret Easton Ellis-penned, Roger Avery-directed Rules of Attraction have become even more troubling than they were with the razor-sharp satire was released. 7 & 9:30 pm Friday-Saturday, 3 pm Sunday, July 1-3. Long after Last Tango in Paris shocked the world with new applications for butter, Bernado Bertolucci returned to steam up screens with The Dreamers, featuring Michael Pitt, Eva Green and a little brotherly. For '80s kids? Just watch Goonies instead. įor '90s kids, scrappy coming-of-age comedy The Sandlot is the ultimate summer movie. See it: The Hollywood's 90 th Anniversary starts with 2001: A Space Odyssey Friday-Sunday, July 1-July 3. All it took was some upgrades and a group of programmers willing to listen to the audience and transform a night at the movies into something more: Social events rather than a solitary ones. At 90, Portland's iconic movie theater has finally become the great American movie house it's always shown the potential to be. "When I joined the board, I honestly didn't want to go there that much, but I could see the potential." ![]() We're all movie geeks, so we're creating a place people want to go," says Doug Whyte, who has served as executive director since 2010, right about the time the theater started fully firing on all cylinders, revamping its programming and giving the building much-needed upgrades. "When we started off, we didn't know what the hell we were doing. Related: Outdoor Movies Go Beyond Pix and the Bricks This Summer. In the past half decade, the theater has revamped, restructured and rebuilt. Not bad for a theater that once languished as a leaky-roofed second-run theater in the '70s and survived a stint as a poorly attended art house specializing in more Merchant Ivory than cult classics and audience participation. That's to say nothing of the educational aspect of the nonprofit institution. Hecklevision, B-Movie Bingo and other audience-participation screenings are the norm, as are guest-curated series like Queer Horror, live-scored silent films on the antique organ, and everything in between. Kung Fu Theater-featuring long-forgotten 35mm prints from programmer Dan Halsted's stash-has a cult of its own. A recent screening of the 1974 oddity Zardoz sold out, and included an audience member dressed in Sean Connery's trademark mankini. These are banner events, but honestly, at this point, nearly every special screening is treated like a big event. Pennebaker-himself 90 years old-for a double feature of the Bob Dylan classic Don't Look Back and Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars (July 6), and a retrospective of films featuring nonagenarian legend Harry Dean Stanton ( Paris, Texas, Repo Man, Escape from New York). The buyers of the Ferrignos’ former home in Arroyo Grande were represented by Lindsay Harn at Richardson Properties, while Jeffrey Landon at Cal Coastal Properties repped the Ferrignos in that sale as well as the purchase of their new home in Arroyo Grande, which was listed with Shane DeBerti at Miramar International.The celebration also includes an appearance by legendary rock documentarian D.A. The Santa Monica property was listed with Simon Salloom at Douglas Elliman, and the buyers were repped by Dev Tailor at Westside Estate Agency. A detached garage of some 1,000 square feet was, not surprisingly, converted to a multi-room gym. ![]() Described in marketing materials as “English Revival” in style, with quarter-sawn oak floorboards and other period details, the roughly 3,500-square-foot bungalow contains five bedrooms and 4.5 bathrooms. Purchased in 1980 for about $550,000, the property, which could use some gussying up, was sold in April for $3.25 million to a buyer who almost immediately made it available as a rental at $12,000 per month. Universe and his wife and manager, Carla Ferrigno, one of the many women who accused Bill Cosby of sexual assault, long owned a 1920s cottage quaintly surrounded by a white picket fence in Santa Monica’s coveted Gillette Regent’s Square neighborhood. ![]()
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