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Author
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Topic: Multiplex Advice
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William Hooper
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1879
From: Mobile, AL USA
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 09-17-2003 12:03 AM
Some of the variations I've seen of this: 1) A partition is installed at the balcony rail ALL THE WAY up to the ceiling. Another partition is installed a few feet back, & this new space at the foot of the balcony becomes the new projection booth for the big screen & auditorium which remain unchanged on the floor. The area in the balcony is usually divided again, front to back, creating 2 auditoriums in the balcony. The booth(s) are located at the top of the balcony, sometimes in a mostly-unchanged original booth. Disadvantages: Often for mid-size balcony theaters, the only entrance to the balcony is at the cross-over aisle near the bottom. Audiences will enter & leave the auditorium down front in front of the screen while the movie is running, which is very distracting. The same is true for theater personnel going to the booth in the show. Plus, with the booth for the theater on the floor being behind the balcony screen, the entrance to the booth & folks going in & out are often visible distractions for the audience in the balcony auditorium(s). And construction that wall from the edge of the balcony to the ceiling is a big job!
2) A partition is constructed from the edge of the underside of the balcony to the floor, creating one space under the balcony, & leaving the other space. Often, the new underbalcony space is divided again lenghtwise, to create 2 auditoriums under the balcony. Walls are erected at the back of the underbalcony spaces to create the new booths for these auditoriums. The original booth & original screen remain in use, but the seating for that screen is only the balcony. The advantage is lower cost, easier construction, & less distractions during operation for the audience. The drawback is that the big auditorium (using the original screen & booth) has the worst seats: just the old balcony seats.
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Carl Martin
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1424
From: Oakland, CA, USA
Registered: Feb 2002
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posted 09-19-2003 05:43 PM
i've never seen anything like #2, but #1 pretty much describes our triple, and its problems. the downstairs booth is accessible from the mezzanine, but the upstairs booths only from the auditoria. i hate having to go up and down with a show going, especially a crowded one with people on both sides of the aisle, but sometimes it has to be done, ducking down and tightly clenching my keys to prevent rattle. the front wall is actually built out beyond the rail of the original balcony.
a couple more points. a house with a booth at the top of a stadium-style balcony probably has a steep projection angle, and probably still will after it's tripled. our downstairs screen has fairly bad keystoning. it's embarrassing showing windowboxed scope trailers. also, because of the curve of the balcony, the upstairs theaters have oddly angled screens. the projectors are way off to the sides in those booths, so it's not too off-axis, but to sit centered to the screen you have to sit close to the far wall (and still people just love to sit way over on the other side, where latecomers and projectionists have to walk in front of them).
carl
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