The American Cinematheque, L.A.'s Year-Round Film Festival, Celebrates 40 Years of Movies
The American Cinematheque, L.A.'s Year-Round Film Festival, Celebrates 40 Years of Movies originally appeared on L.A. Mag.
Film festivals have been bumming around Los Angeles since the dawn of the movie industry. The 1923 Motion Picture Exposition brought movie stars, wrestlers and stuntmen to an empty field near the Coliseum to drum up interest in silent movies. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences unspooled the 1916 film Intolerance for the public in 1940. During World War II, the Silent Movie Theater on Fairfax began showing vintage films year-round. More comprehensive programming started when LACMA came to Wilshire Boulevard — and when student director Gary Essert started scheduling films at UCLA in 1964. Four years later, the twentysomething Essert leased an abandoned nightclub in Hollywood to create a new kind of venue he called Kaleidoscope. 'We had hundreds of people sitting on the floor at the old Earl Carroll Theatre,' Essert's onetime colleague Marc Wanamaker says. 'We had a professional light show and then the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane would play, and then we'd show films on a big Cinemascope screen we made. It was a film orgy for 72 hours straight.'
Essert's Kaleidoscope evolved into the Los Angeles International Film Exposition, recruiting luminaries like George Cukor and Rosalind Russell to serve on its board. Filmex premiered The Last Picture Show at Grauman's Chinese in 1971, with Groucho Marx and Andy Warhol in the audience. By 1985, Essert was ousted from Filmex but, with help from filmmaker Sydney Pollack, turned his attention to building a permanent home for revival film; he called it the American Cinematheque.
Inspired by European temples to film, the complex included plans for three theaters, a cinema bookstore, shops and restaurants at the base of a luxury hotel built around the landmark Pan-Pacific Auditorium in the Fairfax District. But years of planning, fundraising and politicking went up in smoke, along with the building, at the end of the 1980s. The group tried to resurface at the old Kaleidoscope (by then the Aquarius Theatre), as well as what's now Harmony Gold and the Montalbán, before settling on a former dance school next to the Hollywood Roosevelt. Soon, Essert and his boyfriend and business partner Gary Abrahams succumbed to AIDS. 'They died around the same time,' Wanamaker says. 'It left a big void, and the Cinematheque also died for a while. Barbara Smith was our box office manager and nursed [Essert] in the end. It was in his will that she continue the Cinematheque, and a year or two after he died, she got it going again.' Smith was at the helm when the group purchased the earthquake-ravaged Egyptian theater for $1. She ran the restored movie palace for two decades before retiring in 2018. Two years later, the nonprofit sold the building to Netflix but continues programming on weekends.
Today, the Cinematheque also operates the Aero and a screen at the Los Feliz 3, selling out noir nights, Hitchcock revivals and glamorous premieres just as it did decades ago. 'Gary was a showman, a Barnum,' Wanamaker recalls. 'He would have been extremely pleased.'
This story was originally reported by L.A. Mag on Jun 13, 2025, where it first appeared.
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3 days ago
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The American Cinematheque, L.A.'s Year-Round Film Festival, Celebrates 40 Years of Movies
The American Cinematheque, L.A.'s Year-Round Film Festival, Celebrates 40 Years of Movies originally appeared on L.A. Mag. Film festivals have been bumming around Los Angeles since the dawn of the movie industry. The 1923 Motion Picture Exposition brought movie stars, wrestlers and stuntmen to an empty field near the Coliseum to drum up interest in silent movies. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences unspooled the 1916 film Intolerance for the public in 1940. During World War II, the Silent Movie Theater on Fairfax began showing vintage films year-round. More comprehensive programming started when LACMA came to Wilshire Boulevard — and when student director Gary Essert started scheduling films at UCLA in 1964. Four years later, the twentysomething Essert leased an abandoned nightclub in Hollywood to create a new kind of venue he called Kaleidoscope. 'We had hundreds of people sitting on the floor at the old Earl Carroll Theatre,' Essert's onetime colleague Marc Wanamaker says. 'We had a professional light show and then the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane would play, and then we'd show films on a big Cinemascope screen we made. It was a film orgy for 72 hours straight.' Essert's Kaleidoscope evolved into the Los Angeles International Film Exposition, recruiting luminaries like George Cukor and Rosalind Russell to serve on its board. Filmex premiered The Last Picture Show at Grauman's Chinese in 1971, with Groucho Marx and Andy Warhol in the audience. By 1985, Essert was ousted from Filmex but, with help from filmmaker Sydney Pollack, turned his attention to building a permanent home for revival film; he called it the American Cinematheque. Inspired by European temples to film, the complex included plans for three theaters, a cinema bookstore, shops and restaurants at the base of a luxury hotel built around the landmark Pan-Pacific Auditorium in the Fairfax District. But years of planning, fundraising and politicking went up in smoke, along with the building, at the end of the 1980s. The group tried to resurface at the old Kaleidoscope (by then the Aquarius Theatre), as well as what's now Harmony Gold and the Montalbán, before settling on a former dance school next to the Hollywood Roosevelt. Soon, Essert and his boyfriend and business partner Gary Abrahams succumbed to AIDS. 'They died around the same time,' Wanamaker says. 'It left a big void, and the Cinematheque also died for a while. Barbara Smith was our box office manager and nursed [Essert] in the end. It was in his will that she continue the Cinematheque, and a year or two after he died, she got it going again.' Smith was at the helm when the group purchased the earthquake-ravaged Egyptian theater for $1. She ran the restored movie palace for two decades before retiring in 2018. Two years later, the nonprofit sold the building to Netflix but continues programming on weekends. Today, the Cinematheque also operates the Aero and a screen at the Los Feliz 3, selling out noir nights, Hitchcock revivals and glamorous premieres just as it did decades ago. 'Gary was a showman, a Barnum,' Wanamaker recalls. 'He would have been extremely pleased.' This story was originally reported by L.A. Mag on Jun 13, 2025, where it first appeared.
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05-06-2025
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Aged Nearly Two Decades, Limited Release of This Highly-Anticipated Rare Collectible Expected to Sell Out Quickly STAMFORD, Conn., June 5, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Redemption Whiskey proudly expands its highly coveted Ancients Series collection with the release of Redemption 18-Year-Old Bourbon, a limited-edition expression that captures the transformative power of time and craft. Aged for nearly two decades and bottled in extremely limited supply, this collectible bourbon represents Redemption Whiskey's commitment to pushing the boundaries of American whiskey while building on its bold, rye-forward foundation. Expected to sell out quickly, the scarce supply will be available in select markets for pre-order on beginning on Father's Day, June 15. Born in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, Redemption 18-Year-Old Bourbon was once a hidden treasure—rediscovered and meticulously nurtured under the expert guidance of Master Blender Alan Kennedy. 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The result is a bourbon that unfolds beautifully with each sip—an intricate flavor profile that evolves with time, showcasing the magic of expert curation. Expect a bouquet of rich oak intertwined with layers of velvety cherry jam, warm cinnamon, and a delicate hint of mint. Redemption 18-Year-Old Bourbon is best enjoyed neat or on the rocks, offering the kind of refined elegance that will captivate even the most seasoned whiskey connoisseur. Redemption 18-Year-Old | 103.4 Proof | $399.99 SRP for 750mL NOSE: Warm oak, immediately followed by cherry jam, cinnamon and subtle hint of mint PALATE: Cherry notes, blended with oak, a touch of sweet corn and delicate hints of vanilla and leather FINISH: Medium to long, with oak and vanilla and a lingering hint of cherry With only 2,400 bottles available, Redemption 18-Year-Old Bourbon will be available beginning in June with a suggested retail price of $399.99 for a 750mL bottle. Consumers can purchase the limited-edition offering in store and online at (where available). Sitting alongside its rare counterparts Redemption 36-Year-Old Bourbon and 18-Year-Old-Rye, Redemption 18-Year-Old Bourbon is a testament to patience and ultra-aging techniques and has already received accolades including Double Gold wins in both the 2025 San Francisco World Spirits Competition and 2025 New York International Spirits Competition. For those lucky enough to experience it, this bourbon represents not just a drink, but a rare opportunity to savor the exceptional in its purest form. For more information about Redemption 18-Year-Old Bourbon or the Redemption Ancients Series portfolio, visit or follow us on Instagram at @RedemptionWhiskey. About Redemption:Redemption is leading the rye revival, with a full range of bold and spicy super-premium award-winning whiskeys that are masterfully aged and blended. 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Please drink responsibly. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE Redemption Whiskey Sign in to access your portfolio


New York Times
04-06-2025
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Misery Loves Company? Bleak Week: Cinema of Despair Hits a Nerve.
The festival Bleak Week: Cinema of Despair started three years ago as a primal scream from a little Los Angeles nonprofit organization. What has happened since says a lot about the mood in at least one corner of American culture. The American Cinematheque, a nonprofit that brings classic art films to Los Angeles theaters, was struggling to sell tickets in 2022. Older cinephiles were still spooked by the Covid pandemic; younger ones were glued to Netflix. At the same time, some Cinematheque staff members were depressed about the direction the world seemed to be heading. It was the year Russia invaded Ukraine, the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, a gunman killed 19 children at a Texas elementary school and Big Tech rolled out artificial intelligence bots. Out of that somber stew came a programming idea called Bleak Week: Cinema of Despair. Over seven days, the Cinematheque screened 30 feel-bad movies. It called the selections 'the greatest films from around the world that explore the darkest sides of humanity.' For the inaugural festival, one centerpiece film was Béla Tarr's 'Satantango' (1994), a seven-hour-and-19-minute contemplation of decay and misery. ''Everyone was saying, 'You should do comedies,'' Grant Moninger, the Cinematheque's artistic director, said. 'But we thought, 'What if you did the exact opposite?' We're not in this to dangle keys at a baby.' (Now might be a good moment to mention that Moninger grew up with a mother, he said, who 'only rented movies on VHS in two genres: the Holocaust and slavery.') Want all of The Times? Subscribe.