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Author Topic: SLC VILLA THEATRE TO BE SOLD
Mark Gulbrandsen
Resident Trollmaster

Posts: 16657
From: Music City
Registered: Jun 99


 - posted 05-31-2001 01:14 PM      Profile for Mark Gulbrandsen   Email Mark Gulbrandsen   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
It looks like here we go again. The greedy buck counters are back at work. The still Cinerama capable Villa Theatre with its 90 foot plus wide floor to ceiling screen is to be sold this week. The article is as follows......
"Columbus Georgia based Carmike Cinemas Inc. plans to sell the long standing Villa Theatre Theatre at 3092 So. Highland Dr., Salt Lake City this week.
Carmike, which filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy last year , plans to sell the cinema to buisnessman Edmond Simantob for 2.4 million.
Simantobs Utah holdings include Simantov Oriental Rug Gallery and the Felt Building in which it is located at 341 S. Main in downtown Salt Lake.
Should there be any competing offers, they will be considered May 30 in the New York City offoces of Carmikes bankruptcy councel. A hearing to approve any sale will be held the following day."
The article goes on to talk about Carmikes Utah holdings and the fact thatSimantob could not be reached for comment.
What a pisser!
Mark @ GTS

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John Eickhof
Jedi Master Film Handler

Posts: 588
From: Wendell, ID USA
Registered: Jan 2000


 - posted 06-01-2001 01:18 AM      Profile for John Eickhof   Author's Homepage   Email John Eickhof   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Bad news Mark! Looks like Carmike is finally starting to liquidate... Let's hope this guy
doesn't make it into an oriental rug showplace!!!

------------------
John Eickhof President, Chief Slave
Northwest Theatre Equipment Co., Inc.
P.O.Box 258
Wendell, ID. 83355-0258
208-536-5489
email: jeickhof@nteequip.com

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Mark Gulbrandsen
Resident Trollmaster

Posts: 16657
From: Music City
Registered: Jun 99


 - posted 06-05-2001 03:09 PM      Profile for Mark Gulbrandsen   Email Mark Gulbrandsen   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
For those that are interested in the Villa or would just like to see it, please check out this web site. http://www.geocities.com/saltlakevilla/
Mark @ GTS


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Adam Martin
I'm not even gonna point out the irony.

Posts: 3686
From: Dallas, TX
Registered: Nov 2000


 - posted 07-06-2001 11:41 AM      Profile for Adam Martin   Author's Homepage   Email Adam Martin       Edit/Delete Post 
Update from KSL-TV:
quote:

Saving The Villa Theater
More Info: www.villatheatre.com

Some people love movies. Some people love old movie theaters.

Two of the latter kind are organizing an effort and have even set up a web-page called "VillaTheatre.Com" to save Utah's last remaining movie palace.

News Specialist John Hollenhorst has the story.

The Villa Theater. She may be old fashioned. Just one, very big screen, instead of the dozen or more screens that are the rage at multi-plexes.

And the Villa may be a bit tattered around the edges. But she's still grand and fancy. She still attracts a crowd.

And a couple of her fans are hoping their worst fears won't come true.

MARK GULBRANDSEN: "SEEING THE BUILDING GET HIT BY A WRECKING BALL."

No one is sure if that will happen.

The Carmike Cinema chain filed for bankruptcy and put the Villa up for sale. No one knows if a new buyer would show movies or tear it down.

GRANT SMITH/SALT LAKE CITY: "ONCE IT'S GONE WE CAN'T REPLACE IT. WE WON'T EVER SEE ANOTHER THEATER LIKE THIS. IT'S THE ONLY REMANT OF THE PAST MOVIE PALACES WE USED TO HAVE."

JOHN HOLLENHORST REPORTING: "WHAT GIVES THIS THEATER A SPECIAL PLACE IN THE HEARTS OF MOVIEGOERS AND POPCORN LOVERS, IS THAT IN THE 1950'S IT WAS ONE OF THE FEW PLACES YOU COULD GO TO SEE A BRAND-NEW PROCESS CALLED CINERAMA."

"How the West Was Won" is the best-known Cinerama film.

It's a Superwide-screen format, shot simultaneously by three cameras, and projected by three projecters on the Villa's curved screen 40 years ago.

MARK GULBRANDSEN/SALT LAKE CITY: "REAL THREE PROJECTOR CINERAMA IS PROBABLY THE BEST FILM FORMAT THAT EVER EXISTED."

The Cinerama format died young. The Villa may die old.

MARK GULBRANDSEN/SALT LAKE CITY: "A VERY IMPORTANT, AND VANISHING PART OF FILMIC HISTORY. IT NEEDS TO BE PRESERVED."

GRANT SMITH/SALT LAKE CITY: "COURSE IF NO ONE'S GOING TO COME TO THE THEATER, THEN NO ONE'S GOING TO BE ABLE TO KEEP IT OPEN. BUT IF MORE PEOPLE REALIZED WHAT KIND OF A THEATER IT WAS, THEY WOULD COME MORE OFTEN."

The hope is for a movie-loving Sugar Daddy to step in.

That actually happened in Seattle. Billionaire Paul Allen used his Microsoft money to save a Cinerama Theater. There are now just four left.

A Salt Lake businesman has made a bid to buy the theater. He did not return our calls today and neither did the Carmike Cinema chain.




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