FILM REVIEW
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Tony Dodero
I remember the crackling sounds of the speakers, the fogged up windows
that hindered the view of the screen. I remember the cardboard pizza and
the playgrounds and the crunching sound of my mom eating popcorn.
I remember cramming into the back of a wood-paneled station wagon, my
little brother and I wearing matching flannel pajamas.
For those who have similar flashbacks, I recommend taking a drive down
memory lane and catching “Drive-in Movie Memories,” directed by Kurt
Kuenne.
“There’s something neat about the communal experience,” movie critic
Leonard Maltin explains in this vintage-looking documentary. “You
remember it as you would your first kiss. Your first car.”
Documentaries are successful if the viewer learns something new. And
this film, based on the book “American Drive-in Movie Theater,” by Don
and Susan Sanders, is brimming with lots of drive-in trivia.
According to the film, Richard Hollingsted launched the drive-in movie
idea in Camden, N.J., in June 1933. It slowly grew in popularity until it
spun out of control just after World War II.
The movie plays out like a drive-in scrapbook, chronicling the
different trends and inventions that were spawned in the wake of the
outdoor theater phenomenon.
Movie lot owners employed monkeys to entertain guests, sold heaters
that malfunctioned and blew black dust, and hawked mini-awnings to keep
the rain off car windshields.
The drive-in slowly evolves in the film into a societal behemoth, in
which moviegoers would spend hours watching flicks, eating junk food and,
of course, necking in the back seat.
Alas, the film chronicles how the once-mighty drive-in industry,
killed by video and its own failings, crumbled into ruin, the large
chunks of land sold off to shopping center developers.
But all is not lost. The drive-ins are making a comeback, the film
shows, and maybe, just maybe, there is hope that this pure slice of
Americana may return to prominence.
Now I just need to remember to get a new pair of flannel pajamas.
* “Drive-In Movie Memories” will play at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Edwards
Island 2, 999 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach.
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