I live right near where the Odeon on Carlton used to be. Since I first saw a picture of it a couple years ago, I've developed a bit of a fascination with it. I can't believe it was torn down for The Maples apartments - a thoroughly drear building.
It's a deco stunner. I love the overt sculptural form of the outside. The screen inside is a tad smaller than one might expect compared to the size of the auditorium, but if the theatre was around today, that could have been easily remedied.
What a beauty:
My favourite theatre in Toronto, in retrospect, was probably the Uptown. It was one of the only large one left downtown in the last fifteen years that I've been here. Despite it obviously having had a floor inserted where only the balcony used to be, the main auditorium there was still a sensational place to see a film. The screen was huge, the sound was massive, deep and enveloping (and loud!), and there wasn't a bad seat in the house. The pervasive homey odour of years of popcorn and use didn't hurt a bit either. It was unpretentious, relaxed, and great. The last big film I remember seeing there was "The Matrix" which was a real event on a screen that size.
Again, it put a bad taste in one's mouth when they tore it down for dishonest reasons - claiming it would cost too much to put in wheelchair access, and besides, it was structurally weak, etc., etc. When it collapsed due to the faulty demolition and killed that person - it was as if it went out fighting. As glad as I am to not see a parking lot there, whenever I see the condo's name that replaced it, I miss the place.
My favourite theatre growing up was The Tivoli in Hamilton, which was the 'big city' to us rural folks, and relatively close. It was a good old movie palace, with every kids favourite - coloured lights on red drapes that pulled back to reveal the screen, mock-roman statues in niches, and an eggshell blue-and gold decorated ceiling. Seeing "The Empire Strikes Back", "Return Of The Jedi" and "The Black Hole" there were real events. The Uptown had a lot of the same atmosphere to it.
Curiously enough, the one experience I ever had at the Eaton Centre's long-defunct cinemas as a good one. I was on a trip into the city from my small hometown, and since everything was pretty dazzling and amazing, going down the multitude of ramps and hallways to find the tiny theatre that was showing "Back To The Future" felt like futuristic fun. We went straight from the theatre to Lime Ricky's in the old, metallic Eaton Centre and it all seemed great.
The theatre, I remember, had a good picture and sound, but maybe it had been upgraded in those later years. Friends of mine who went earlier than I did have nothing but bad memories of the place. No fun, no projectionist (!?) and no good quality.
I wish I could have seen the Mies Van Der Rohe theatre under the Toronto-Dominion Centre. I have a friend who saw "2001 - A Space Odyssey" there, and he said when he walked out of the theatre afterwards into the Centre, it was an overwhelming experience.