I think it was about 15 years ago I noticed a new theatre chain around here, the RITZ. They specialized in "art" films, imports, and reissued restorations. I LOVE going to see restorations of old movies! Dad and me went to see
GONE WITH THE WIND (which I hated, but I knew he loved, and I figured, if I was ever gonna sit thru this THING again, on a big screen is the way to do it-- I was right!). On another occasion, we went to Philly to see
THE THIRD MAN. I'd only just seen it on PBS 6 months earlier. I figure, anytime I pay to see something I've already seen on TV, I must like it. Later, I went with a friend to see
TOUCH OF EVIL, without even having a clue as to what it was about. Years before that, I went to Philly to see
CITIZEN KANE. (Gee, that's no less than 3 films with Orson Welles!) One of the Philly places also ran
MST 3000: THE MOVIE, which I went to with my best friend. The "movie" in question was
THIS ISLAND EARTH. Apparently, the felt
FORBIDDEN PLANET was "too good" to make fun of. Last time I remember going to the Philly place was for
THX-1138. I did not like that movie at all when I'd seen it before-- and I went anyway! Yep, it was much better on a big screen, plus, of course, they'd added some new stuff.
The Ritz chain doesn't sell hot dogs or any other kind of hot food (that I recall), but they do have some very peculiar kinds of snacks and drinks I've never seen in anyother theatre chain. I guess it's nice to see a company wanting to have their own unique identity.
I just remembered, Dad and me also got to see the restorations of both
REAR WINDOW and
VERTIGO. Somehow, until then, I'd never seen them before! I know they were out of circulation for most of my life, but they had been put out again in the 80's, and I completely missed them then. Didn't see them until their 2nd reissue, after they'd been restored.
Strange but true: when I got to the end of
VERTIGO, I suddenly realized what Brian DePalma was doing with
BODY DOUBLE. Years later, it hit me that the unusual story structure was very similar to Ian Fleming's 1st novel,
CASINO ROYALE. You think the story's over... so why does it just keep going and going and going? (Ohhhhh... THAT's why!)