Laemmle Theatres | |
Type: | Private |
Founder: | Max and Kurt Laemmle |
Area Served: | Los Angeles, California |
Industry: | Entertainment |
Services: | Movie theater, Academy Award qualification |
Owner: | Robert and Greg Laemmle |
Laemmle Theatres is a group of family-run arthouse movie theaters in the Los Angeles area. It was established in 1938[1] and is owned and operated by Robert Laemmle and his son Greg Laemmle.
Robert Laemmle's father Max and uncle Kurt, cousins of Universal Pictures founder Carl Laemmle, bought their first movie theater in the Highland Park neighborhood of Los Angeles in 1938.
There are seven locations:Claremont 5 in Claremont,Glendale 5 in Glendale,Monica Film Center in Santa Monica,Royal Theatre in West Los Angeles,Town Center 5 in Encino,NoHo 7 in North Hollywood,and Newhall 7 in Newhall.The Laemmle Grande 4-Plex on South Figueroa Street closed October 25, 2009 as L.A. Live's Regal Cinema complex was set to open.[1] Construction of the Newhall theater was completed in 2020, but its opening was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] It opened on April 9, 2021.[3]
In December 2011, the Glendale City Council and Redevelopment Agency approved a $12.8 million[4] plan to develop a loft with 42 residential units, a 5-screen Laemmle Theaters, and a Panda Inn restaurant. Construction of the residential building complex began in mid-2015,[5]
During the 21st century, the Laemmle venues have come to be known as the "Secret Path to Oscar Qualifying" since they have been repeatedly used by independent films, short films, and documentaries for that purpose. Laemmle provides services designed to enable a film to qualify for Academy Awards,[8] charging a flat rate for exhibition while giving the film's producers 100 percent of the box office receipts; they have someone meet every year with the Academy committees in all the categories to ensure their "qualifying run" bookings actually qualify. They even help film-makers book their films outside of their own theaters if a committee requires that.[9]
The Laemmle Theatres are the subject of the 2022 documentary Only in Theaters, directed by Raphael Sbarge.[10] [11]
]
.