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Chicago’s tallest movie screen is likely gone for good. Here’s what’s left (plenty, actually) for filmgoers who’d rather go big than stay home

  • After a four-month renovation, the AMC IMAX theater located on...

    Chicago Tribune

    After a four-month renovation, the AMC IMAX theater located on Navy Pier boasts new seats, a fresh black-and-white color scheme, laser projection and more concessions in the lobby. The theater reopens Thursday evening with Stephen King’s “It.�

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    Neal Preston / ABC

    It's impossible not to love "Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella," starring Brandy in the title role and Whitney Houston as the fairy godmother. This production by Disney and ABC (also produced by Houston) originally premiered in 1997 and quickly became a culturally significant performance due to the groundbreaking casting. The film has had such an inter-generational impact that Disney+ only recently added the musical to the streaming site after fans and Brandy made many urging requests over social media. "Cinderella" stars Whoopi Goldberg, Bernadette Peters, Jason Alexander, Victor Garber, Natalie Desselle-Reid and Paolo Montalban. (Disney+) — Hannah Herrera Greenspan

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    AP

    Robyn Goodfellowe, voiced by Honor Kneafsey, left, and Mebh Óg Mactíre, voiced by Eva Whittaker, in "Wolfwalkers."

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    Tony Rivetti/Freeform/TNS/TNS

    In Freeform's "Everything's Gonna Be Okay", Josh Thomas plays a young gay man who takes over the care of his half sisters, including Kayla Cromer.

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    Greg Gayne/NBC/TNS

    From left, Ben Feldman, America Ferrera and Nico Santos are seen in "Superstore."

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    Charles Cherney/Chicago Tribune

    Harold Washington greets supporters while campaigning in the Chicago Loop in 1983, only days after winning the Democratic nomination for mayor.

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    AP

    This image released by Magnolia Pictures shows Ca?ta?lin Tolontan in a scene from "Collective." (Magnolia Pictures via AP)

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    AP

    This image released by HBO shows Kate Winslet in a scene from "Mare of Easttown," debuting on April 18.

  • From left, Eugene Levy, Catherine O'Hara, Dan Levy and Annie...

    Pop TV/TNS

    From left, Eugene Levy, Catherine O'Hara, Dan Levy and Annie Murphy star in the final season of "Schitt's Creek." (Pop TV/TNS)

  • I'll be the first to mention how I don't like...

    Chuck Zlotnick/AP

    I'll be the first to mention how I don't like Marvel serializing what should be full-feature films. But after watching the first few episodes of "The Falcon and the Winter Soldier," which picks up after the Blip and Captain America passing over his shield to Sam Wilson (Falcon), I stand corrected. It's just enough action and mystery to keep you on the hook while the pandemic plays out. Wilson is coping with family problems and his Avengers responsibilities, while Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan) is trying to make amends for his Winter Soldier days while trying to be more present in the world (read: therapy). It may not seem popcorn worthy, but after you see the new threat to the world and the new iteration of Captain America (after bingeing all of "WandaVision"), you'll change your mind. (Disney+) — Darcel Rockett

  • Kirkoiu Muldrew as Eva and August Nunez as Zelda in...

    COURTESY OF NETFLIX/Netflix/TNS

    Kirkoiu Muldrew as Eva and August Nunez as Zelda in "City of Ghosts".

  • My first encounter with Emilio Estevez was not "St. Elmo's...

    Disney Plus/TNS

    My first encounter with Emilio Estevez was not "St. Elmo's Fire" nor "The Breakfast Club" — nor even "The Outsiders". It was Walt Disney's "The Mighty Ducks,", a story about a ramshackle group of misfit tweens who come together, with the help of their coach Gordon Bombay (Estevez), to become the greatest Pee-Wee hockey team in the world. OK, it was probably just in their small Minnesota town. What followed was two more films, an animated series and a lot of kids wanting to join their local hockey teams without ever ice skating before. The Disney+ miniseries is a whole new group of insecure outcasts, but Coach Bombay is back and hates hockey — again! But when a desperate mom played by Lauren Graham needs a place for her son's hockey team to practice, we know his cold heart won't last long. The Mighty Ducks team has become a powerhouse of work-no-play tweens and "Dance Mom"-esque parents pushing their kids to their physical and mental limits. Young Evan Morrow is kicked off the team, and with his mom's encouragement, puts together a new one named "The Don't Bothers", based on his mom's viral rant at the Ducks' coach. We all know where this is headed, but it's a fun journey along the way. (Disney+) — Lauren Hill

  • Even in an age where seemingly everything is available to...

    AP

    Even in an age where seemingly everything is available to stream on demand, after a year stuck at home, it can feel tough to find something to watch that parents and young kids both genuinely enjoy. In our household, that's when we turn to David Byrne. Good concert films are rare, and Byrne has starred in two excellent ones: "Stop Making Sense," Jonathan Demme's 1984 chronicle of a Talking Heads concert (circa "Speaking in Tongues"), and "American Utopia," a 2020 Spike Lee joint capturing Byrne's stellar Broadway show of the same name. Both films manage to capture the electricity of performance that we adults crave; both inspire our 4-year-old to dance herself into a stupor. As brilliant as these films are to watch, I think our daughter may have the better approach. Queue them up; I dare you to sit still. ("American Utopia": HBO Max; "Stop Making Sense": Amazon Prime, VOD) — Jennifer Day

  • Demián Bichir, left, and Robin Wright in a scene from...

    Daniel Power / Focus Features/AP

    Demián Bichir, left, and Robin Wright in a scene from "Land."

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    Dimitry Elyashkevich/TNS

    If you know "The Eric Andre Show," you know that Andre works beautiful, stupid, smart, stupid/smart magic, pranking the universe for the sake of hidden-camera humiliations of all stripes. In "Bad Trip," which costars Chicago native Lil Rel Howery and Tiffany Haddish, we have one of the more buoyant examples of this comic sub-genre, not quite up to the first "Borat" but way, way out ahead of any of the "Jackass" movies. It's unaccountably well-sustained raunch and harsh revelry. (Netflix) — Michael Phillips

  • The dysfunctional Moody family is back for Season 2. Denis...

    philippebosse.com/TNS

    The dysfunctional Moody family is back for Season 2. Denis Leary and Elizabeth Perkins play a Chicago couple whose three adult children are living in their home. It's a low-stakes comedy that has some touching moments. Though the show was shot in Canada, the writers work hard to nail Chicago street names. (Fox) — Tracy Swartz

  • Animated character Raya, voiced by Kelly Marie Tran, left, appears...

    AP

    Animated character Raya, voiced by Kelly Marie Tran, left, appears with Sisu the dragon in a scene from "Raya and the Last Dragon"

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I close my eyes, and think of Vin Diesel’s big ol’ head.

It’s the only thing I remember from the movie “Bloodshot,” and from what was likely my final visit to the Navy Pier IMAX theater, 13 months ago.

Operated most recently by AMC Theatres, it’s closed now. Probably for good, if another multiplex brand such as Cinemark (which recently bailed on the downtown Evanston 18-screen Century complex) doesn’t take it over.

For two- or three-thousand fellow Chicagoans, the abbreviated March 2020 engagement of “Bloodshot” marked their last time sitting in the Navy Pier IMAX auditorium, flattened by the decibels and the big wow of the screen. This was before everything closed down

“Bloodshot” was pretty lame. The Navy Pier IMAX screen’s dimensions? Not lame. Sixty feet high. Eighty-six feet wide. This was the sole, “true” IMAX auditorium within the city limits. And when Christopher Nolan’s “The Dark Knight” played there, or when a new “Mission: Impossible” played there, it played there.

After a four-month renovation, the AMC IMAX theater located on Navy Pier boasts new seats, a fresh black-and-white color scheme, laser projection and more concessions in the lobby. The theater reopens Thursday evening with Stephen KingâEURTMs âEUR It.âEUR?
After a four-month renovation, the AMC IMAX theater located on Navy Pier boasts new seats, a fresh black-and-white color scheme, laser projection and more concessions in the lobby. The theater reopens Thursday evening with Stephen KingâEURTMs âEUR It.âEUR?

Last month, as reported in the Tribune, AMC Theatres called it quits on the 300-seat Navy Pier IMAX as part of a chain-wide, cost-cutting move spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“That’s a big loss for Chicago,” said Music Box Theatre general manager Ryan Oestreich, whose Lakeview theater, in non-pandemic years, hosts the annual Music Box 70 Millimeter Film Festival.

“Even the lousy films I saw there had a tinge of magic,” posted rogerebert.com assistant editor Matt Fagerholm on Facebook recently. He cited the live-action “Beauty and the Beast”; I’ll see his “Beauty and the Beast” and raise him a “Bloodshot.”

Future prospects for the IMAX auditorium remain in flux.

Navy Pier communications director Payal Patel notes that the Pier is “currently working with AMC to transition their operations out of the IMAX space, and will begin exploring new opportunities for that space in the coming months. The Pier is opening to all possibilities at this time, including other theater operators.”

So far, Patel confirmed Monday, “there are no theater operators on the table right now.”

It’s likely the space will be turned over to a ride or an attraction, unrelated to moviegoing.

We’ve heard this before, and not just in moviegoing. The Tribune recently reported on the repurposing of Lakeview’s four-auditorium theatrical mainstay Stage 773, to accommodate what executive director Jill Valentine called a “Willy Wonka meets Burning Man meets the Museum of Modern Art immersive experience.” Beyond hot chocolate flung against a white wall, with a frame around it, I’m not sure what that means. We’ll see!

We’re already sharing a massive, immersive experience. It’s called a COVID-19 outbreak, with variants.

Where does the closing of the Navy Pier IMAX leave presumably vaccinated audiences eager to immerse themselves in something else, something with superheroics or Vin Diesel’s head on a screen they can’t get at home?

There are options. According to an IMAX spokesperson, 12 Chicago area theaters featuring the IMAX technology (if not the size and impact of the Navy PIer IMAX screen), remain either open or soon to reopen. The screens are located in multiplexes in Hodgkins, Lombard, Naperville, New Lenox, Niles, Oak Brook, Schaumburg, Skokie, South Barrington, Woodridge, Bloomington and, in Chicago, not far from where I live and where I saw “Snakes on a Plane,” the Regal City North.

This Thursday, one of the area’s great movie palaces, the 1928-built Tivoli in downtown Downers Grove, reopens with “Godzilla vs. Kong” on the larger of its two screens, a full 40 feet in width, and “Raya and the Last Dragon” in the smaller venue.

Another beaut, the Music Box Theatre, built a year after the Tivoli, continues its in-person screenings after a year of enterprising pandemic management.

As with nearly every aspect of arts, culture, entertainment and the nerve-wracked leisure economies, the pandemic has hastened all kinds of audience habits. With film, it’s moviestaying vs. moviegoing. The studios and distributors, increasingly shipping their marquee attractions straight to home viewing in tandem with theatrical releases, are either being pragmatic or heartless, depending on where your sympathies lie. For communal indoor moviegoing, your sympathies go both ways: with the people who make and distribute the films, and with the exhibitors who are in such rough shape right now.

For context, I’m somewhere in the neighborhood of Dr. Anthony Fauci, get-back-out-there-wise. Unneeded risk sounds pretty stupid and profoundly selfish to me now. Especially after the year our family has been through. I happily take enough risks on the job I probably wouldn’t take otherwise. It’s the job, and I haven’t done that job in a way that remotely resembles how my colleagues in Los Angeles or New York have done it. So maybe I’m not really in Dr. Fauci’s neighborhood. Maybe my definition of risk is a lot riskier than yours.

Last year, according to the Motion Picture Association, U.S. and Canadian box office revenue was down 80%. AMC Theatres lost $4.6 billion in 2020. It has been a terrible year in so many ways.

Meantime, civilians and critics, date-night viewers and arts journalists alike swim against the tide of endless streaming options. All I had to do was type that previous sentence, and my brain was thinking: When can you borrow time later today to finish the terrific HBO four-parter “Exterminate All the Brutes”?

Going to a theater, especially a tall-screen whammy such as the Navy Pier IMAX, takes you away from that endless menu of options for a couple of hours. It’s just you, in a crowd, getting clobbered by an egg-headed action star or Tom Cruise, running, and ideally by a filmmaker who knows how to exploit the true IMAX dimensions for maximum wow.

I love the wow. It’s why I love the Music Box’s 70MM film festival. It’s why, as a five-year-old, I sat in the first row of the Venetian Theatre in my hometown, Racine, Wisconsin, long since demolished, watching John Frankenheimer’s “Grand Prix,” thereby ruining my patience for conventional speed limits for life.

There are still places Chicago moviegoers can get that wow. First, and right now, as a society, we get healthy and mask up. We grow comfortable with the idea of masking up indefinitely. And then?

Let the wows flourish, on the other side of life as we’ve known it since “Bloodshot” at the Navy Pier IMAX. Let the wows find their rightful place in every art form we know and love. Including the movies.

Michael Phillips is a Tribune critic.

mjphillips@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @phillipstribune

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