L.A. Imax Says No, So Disney
Builds Its Own Huge Screen
Created to show 'Fantasia/2000,' the deluxe but
temporary theater will be dismantled four months after
its opening on New Year's Day.
December 7, 1999
Rebuffed by operators of the only Imax theater in
central Los Angeles, Disney is taking the extraordinary
step of building a temporary theater to showcase its
first Imax feature, "Fantasia/2000."
The new theater, a steel and fiberglass tent
constructed at a cost approaching $4 million, will open
New Year's Day in West Los Angeles, off the 405 Freeway
near Howard Hughes Parkway. The theater will include 622
stadium-style seats, a 12,000-watt digital sound system
and a 56-foot-tall, 80-foot-wide screen that builders
say is as large as any Imax screen in Southern
California. But the theater's most impressive feature is
its short life span: The entire facility will be broken
down and cleared away just four months after it opens.
"Fantasia/2000" is an update and reworking of the
1940 classic, featuring seven new animated sequences set
to classical music. Disney executives have booked the
75-minute film at 76 Imax screens worldwide. But when
Disney executives went searching for an Imax in L.A.,
they found locals a little less eager to welcome
Disney.
Directors of the California Science Center--which
includes a 480-seat Imax theater as part of the
nonprofit science and technology museum--say
negotiations with Disney broke down over the educational
merits of "Fantasia/2000" and the studio's demand for an
exclusive engagement.
"We tried to be flexible, but we couldn't turn over
our entire schedule to Disney," says Joe DeAmicis, vice
president of marketing for the California Science
Center. "We're an educational institution, and we had
real questions about whether this would meet the mandate
of the school groups we serve."
The center schedules four early weekday show times
for groups of schoolchildren on field trips to the
museum. Flashier Imax features like the current
"Siegfried & Roy: The Magic Box" are shown only in
the afternoons, after most school groups have left.
DeAmicis says Disney would not budge on scheduling: They
wanted the entire day for "Fantasia/2000."
"It was a very painful decision for us," says
DeAmicis. "Disney is a donor to the museum, and we
wanted very much to make this work. But we just couldn't
live with their conditions."
Dick Cook, chairman of the Walt Disney Motion Picture
Group, says he doesn't understand the museum's
objections because the company feels that
"Fantasia/2000" met the educational requirements. The
film is showing at 20 other museums and science centers,
along with Disney-designed exhibits exploring the art,
music and technology showcased in the film. In addition,
Cook says Disney is providing study guides and
sponsoring teacher conferences to encourage students to
learn more about computer animation and classical music.
"The argument that this isn't educational is just
bogus," Cook says. "This is a tremendous learning
opportunity--that's why it's been embraced by 20 other
museums and science centers."
After nearly six months of negotiations, Disney made
the decision to go it alone, Cook says. "Luckily, we
have the technologies and capabilities to do something
very unusual and build a theater from scratch," he said.
Disney's special-events division was called in the
last week of November to build the theater--including
four layers of soundproof tenting material, digital
sound equipment, and heating and cooling systems--in
just four weeks. Lyle Breier, vice president of Disney
special events, says the project was suited to a staff
that has previously erected a temporary theater on
Alcatraz Island for the premiere of "The Rock" and
another at Kennedy Space Center for the premiere of
"Armageddon."
Cook says he and his colleagues understand that some
people might consider a tad outlandish the idea of
building a deluxe theater for a four-month
engagement.
"That crossed our minds, but only fleetingly," he
says. "This movie is very special to the studio, and it
speaks right to the heart of our company. We felt we
couldn't not do it."