![](https://thenewbev.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Presidents-Men-top2.jpg)
All the President’s Men
Academy Award winners Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman star in this true story as Washington Post reporters...
All Shows Presented in Glorious 35mm (unless noted in 16mm)
Academy Award winners Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman star in this true story as Washington Post reporters...
The year is 1972 and like most high-school students, Betsy Jobs (Kirsten Dunst) and Arlene Lorenzo (Michelle...
Tickets: $10 Free bag of popcorn for patrons ages 12 and under
Disney’s family friendly film noir is an innovative and Oscar-winning mix of live-action and animation that...
Disney’s family friendly film noir is an innovative and Oscar-winning mix of live-action and animation that...
Tickets: $10 No discounts or passes
A rock ‘n roll adventure following two unlikely lovers who accidentally double cross the mob and hit the...
Hollywood had it coming! When best buds Jay and Silent Bob discover they’re being cut out of the cash from...
The New Beverly Cinema is a historic movie theater located in Los Angeles, California. Housed in a building which dates to the 1920s, it is one of the oldest revival houses in the region.
Read More >A handy guide to key cinema terms.
The most common sizes of film stock used to shoot, print, and present movies. 35mm is preferred for commercial film and TV shoots, with multiple stocks for select shooting conditions. 16mm is more often used for lower-budget projects, commercial and industrial shoots, and previously as a “home movie” format.
A now-dormant process which allowed for multi-channel sound reproduction in theatres using magnetic striping attached to the film print. Often vulnerable to erasure and damage due to demagnetizing and detachment through aging, requiring strict storage and handling conditions. Supplanted by Dolby Stereo, an optical process requiring less delicacy and upkeep.
This indicates the dimension of the projected image, usually measured by comparing the width to the height. For example, 1.85:1, commonly called “flat”, means the picture is 1.85 times as wide to every increment of 1 it is high, and 2.35:1, or “scope”, means the picture will be even wider.