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What's the weirdest place you've ever seen a movie? |
Sometimes, the place where you see a movie can make all the difference.
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A very special screening. |
I hope I will never forget seeing
Citizen Kane (1941) at the magnificent Fox Theatre in Detroit or
The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) at the crumbling Capitol Theatre in Flint. Then there's Chicago's historic Music Box, where I saw
The Wizard of Oz (1939),
Brand on the Brain (2006), and
Inland Empire (2006). Magnificent experiences all. During
Inland Empire, the theater was so cold I kept my winter coat on all three hours!
But I can also remember seeing Do the Right Thing (1989) at the long-gone Genesee Valley Cinema in Flint. This was a perfectly ordinary multiplex, but I happened to be there on a night when the air conditioning was on the fritz and the theater was sweltering, allowing us in the audience to experience some of what the characters onscreen were going through. My mother took me to see that film, and we had a long discussion afterwards about the characters and the choices they made.
Occasionally, the venue where you see a movie isn't even a theater at all. My first, transformative viewing of Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975), for instance, took place on a long bus trip to Indiana when I was a teenager. And I vividly remember watching the Suspiria (2018) reboot on an Amtrak train and being absolutely enraptured by it. Somehow, in both of those examples, being in motion made the viewing experience more intense.
Ed Wood fans in the Los Angeles area have an opportunity later this month to view the director's most famous film in a highly memorable and most appropriate setting. On Saturday, July 26, 2025 at 6:30pm, the San Fernando Valley Historical Society (SFVHS) is hosting a screening of
Plan 9 from Outer Space (1957) at the Pioneer Memorial Cemetery in Sylmar, CA. This, in case you didn't know, is the very cemetery where Eddie actually shot some scenes for the film! Director Mark Carducci visited this cemetery for his documentary
Flying Saucers Over Hollywood (1992), as did film critic Harry Medved for
an episode of his PBS series
Locationland (2025). The SFVHS is holding this screening to honor the 100th anniversary of Ed Wood's birth.