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Author Topic: Daily Variety names Los Angeles Best Screening Rooms
Bill Gabel
Film God

Posts: 3873
From: Technicolor / Postworks NY, USA
Registered: Jan 2002


 - posted 10-30-2003 05:46 PM      Profile for Bill Gabel   Email Bill Gabel   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Nobody knows screening rooms like film critics, who have as strong opinions about the venues as the movies projected on their screens. Daily Variety has expanded this year's always anticipated guide.

Top Flight Rooms

  • 1. Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences'
    Samuel L. Goldwyn Theatre
    2. Paramount Main Theatre
    3. Warner Bros. Steven J. Ross Theatre
    4. Director's Guild of America Theatre 1
Honorable Mentions
  • MGM's Screening Rooms 1,2 & Executive Theatres
    Academy of Television Arts & Sciences' Leonard Goldenson Theatre
    Fox's Darryl F. Zanuck Theatre
    Writers Guild of America
    Harmony Gold Theatre
Small is Beautiful
  • 1. The soon-to-be closed Todd-AO West
    2. The Wilshire Screening Room
    3. Culver Studios' DeMille Theatre
    4. Sony Studios' Backstage Theatre
    5. Clarity Screening Room
The criteria for the list were that problem rooms were knocked for many of the same factors that the best rooms were praised: sightlines, seating comfort, screen size, image illumination, sound and atmospherics. The studios boast generally top scores for the theatres on their lots. Some rooms, such as the Zanuck, are likely to score higher in the future once more critics venture there for screenings.
Under Par

  • 1. Charles Aidikoff Screening Room
    2. Miramax Screening Room
    3. Raleigh Studios' Pickford Screening Room
    4. Raleigh Studios' Fairbanks Screening Room
    5. Fox's William Fox Theatre & Sunset Screening Room (tie)
Dinky screen size and or positioning of the screen and lack of masking were a top complaint about Miramax and Raleigh's tiny rooms, the Pickford and the Fairbanks. These rooms also scored low on general ambience, as did the Ocean Screening Room and the New Line Screening Room. And the personal service in some of these rooms was praised, with staff and projectionists at Raleigh and Sunset mentioned for their professionalism and hospitality.

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System Notices
Forum Watchdog / Soup Nazi

Posts: 215

Registered: Apr 2004


 - posted 05-02-2005 04:00 PM      Profile for System Notices         Edit/Delete Post 

It has been 549 days since the last post.


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Paul Mayer
Oh get out of it Melvin, before it pulls you under!

Posts: 3836
From: Albuquerque, NM
Registered: Feb 2000


 - posted 05-02-2005 04:00 PM      Profile for Paul Mayer   Author's Homepage   Email Paul Mayer   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
This article appeared in the Calendar section of yesterday's Los Angeles Times:

quote:
THE LIFE OF HOLLYWOOD
For rent: the screening room of his dreams
Projecting his passion, Michael Hall is out to create the ultimate viewing experience.

By Mary McNamara, Times Staff Writer

What would it be like, after all, to have your own private screening room? The sudden velvety silence, the big screen, the few rows of seats, the five deep plush chairs in the back row. Here is the magical echo of entitlement and expectation. Without the popcorn and Skittles and cellphone-chattering classes, surely the film you are about to see will be special somehow, extraordinary, no matter that many past experiences would almost guarantee the contrary.

The Wilshire Screening Room is right next to a doctor's office in the generically marble-floored, shiny lobby of a brown-granite modern office building on Wilshire Boulevard and it is not very well marked. But open the correct door — the one next to the security office and up a few steps — and you enter one of the industry rabbit holes, a place of limitless possibility.

"Wait, wait," says a voice, and a man appears, fluffing the cushions of the plush chairs, pushing them fastidiously back to their original positions. He is small, neatly dressed, with perfectly combed hair and a small, precise mustache. He offers a jar of candy — Tootsie Rolls and peppermint drops — while informing you with a smile that no other food or drinks are allowed in the screening room.

If you are five or 10 minutes early, he is likely to fill the time with a brief history of the place — the building once belonged to Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis and this was his personal screening room. It is, the man says proudly, the best small screening room in town as per Variety, and is available for rent for all manner of screenings, even those that might require a small party or reception afterward — for which Audis Husar Fine Art, the next door gallery, is quite lovely and available.

The man is Michael Hall, 39, a third-generation union projectionist — he stresses the union — who for the last two years has leased and run the Wilshire Screening Room.

When he moved to Los Angeles from Orange County five years ago, Hall was simply looking to find projectionist work that was higher quality and paid better. Instead, he found a small and quiet kingdom.

When the building changed owners three years ago, he was hired to upgrade the room. Less than a year later, the building changed hands again, and although he didn't have a contract, Hall continued to improve the equipment, putting $50,000 of his own money into the room. In January 2003, he signed the lease and began his quest to become, as his business card extols, "the best little room in town."

A screen apart

Normal people see movies in theaters. The rest — those who need to see movies before they are released or even quite finished (critics, industry types, festival organizers, members of the press) often see them in screening rooms, which are scattered across Los Angeles. Some studios have their own screening rooms — the big ones on their lots, the smaller ones in sometimes-unexpected buildings in Beverly Hills, Santa Monica and West L.A.

Mainstream theaters are used for big media screenings and premieres — the ArcLight and the Grove are very hot right now — but they are more expensive to rent. Fine if you want an event, full of assistant editors and the film crew's family members, but not sensible if you're showing it to a handful of journalists in hopes they'll want to do profiles of the leads or the director.

For acquisition screenings, small indie premieres, event screenings and prefestival viewings, publicists and filmmakers turn to the smaller rooms, at the Aidikoff and the Clarity in Beverly Hills, the Sunset Screening Room in West Hollywood and the Wilshire. And since he took over the Wilshire, Hall has worked pretty much 24/7 trying to push it to the top of everyone's list.

He still works as a projectionist around town, including in the private screening rooms of the rich and famous, but every cent, he says, goes back into the Wilshire room. Because he wants it to be perfect — "state of the art," he says repeatedly, with an oddly moving mixture of resolve and wistfulness.

"The standards of film quality in some of the big theaters is just horrible," he says, adding in a tone of true shock: "The owners just don't care about quality."

Hall cares about quality and hopes to make other people care too. He envisions running a half-dozen screening rooms around Los Angeles with Wilshire as a model.

"It will take some time," he says with a small smile, "but I'm patient."

It's time to run the movie and he disappears into the projection room, leaving in his wake the achingly familiar and seemingly borderless power of hope that fuels the entertainment industry, as powerful as that of the winsome and resolute young actress stepping off the bus. The last movie Hall saw, he thinks, was "Spider-Man 2." He can't really watch the films from the projection room and with two cellphones and two pagers, he has very little free time. The main title rolls, and here on the screen is the culmination of many people's work and hopes, another shot at fame and fortune.

But in the projection room, Michael Hall is living the dream too. No deals, no paparazzi, no high-profile paycheck. Just Hollywood, pure and simple.

Link to the Wilshire Screening Room

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Mark Gulbrandsen
Resident Trollmaster

Posts: 16657
From: Music City
Registered: Jun 99


 - posted 05-02-2005 05:42 PM      Profile for Mark Gulbrandsen   Email Mark Gulbrandsen   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
It would certainly be interesting to know what type of equipment is in each screening room, sound and projection.... I know about some of the rooms at Paramount but thats about all...

Mark

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Richard Hamilton
Phenomenal Film Handler

Posts: 1341
From: Evansville, Indiana
Registered: Jan 2000


 - posted 05-02-2005 06:33 PM      Profile for Richard Hamilton   Email Richard Hamilton   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Harmony Gold is on the list? Thats pretty cool. I did work on a 5/70 there a couple of years ago.Every day that I was there, it only seemed like a normal office. I guess I wasnt around for any screenings.

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David Stambaugh
Film God

Posts: 4021
From: Eugene, Oregon
Registered: Jan 2002


 - posted 05-02-2005 09:48 PM      Profile for David Stambaugh   Author's Homepage   Email David Stambaugh   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
The only thing missing from that web page is pics of the booth!

What is "Dolby E"? [Confused]

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Steve Guttag
We forgot the crackers Gromit!!!

Posts: 12814
From: Annapolis, MD
Registered: Dec 1999


 - posted 05-02-2005 11:37 PM      Profile for Steve Guttag   Email Steve Guttag   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Dolby-E is used in Broadcast environments. It is a method of encoding up to 8-channels of audio (typically 5.1 + 2 so discrete 5.1 is there and Lt/Rt). The encoder/decoder normally are genlocked to the picture so that latency in video processing is accounted for so the audio sync is maintained through out production. Also Dolby-E can be duped through generations without loss of quality.

Dolby-E is never to be used as a release format thus in broadcast, the last stage of a multichannel Dolby production will convert the 5.1 audio to an AC-3 encode so that home receivers can properly decode the AC-3 signal.

The only Cinema Product that can handle Dolby-E at the moment is the Dolby DMA-8. The DMA-8 does not have to be genlocked to other equipment (which is good since often there is no blackburst or other generator in a typical projection booth lock onto). The CP650 originally was to be able to decode Dolby-E, for a licensing fee but its application for cinema was deemed not necessary since it is a broadcast format and the processing space could be used for other things...so in CP650 firmwares prior to 2.2 had the Dolby-E option upon upgrading a CP650 to 2.2 the Dolby-E option is gone. I don't know of any registered Dolby-E sites using the CP650 as the Dolby-E decoder though I know of some that had that feature active (at least a couple of years ago it was active).

The only theatre site we service that actively uses Dolby-E is the AFI/Silver but they also have a room full of broadcast equipment and the Discovery Channel offices across the street.

For more information on Dolby-E you might check the Dolby site and look up the DP571 encoder or DP572 decoder (same manual and the units look nearly identical).

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