TheRiver Oaks Theatre is a historicmovie theater located in theRiver Oaks Shopping Center in theNeartown community inHouston,Texas,United States, east of theRiver Oaks community.[1] The theater has threeprojection screens; one large screen, downstairs, and two smaller screens, upstairs.
The River Oaks Theatre was built in 1939. It was an example of late-1930sArt Deco design. It was the last of the deluxe neighborhood movie theaters built by Interstate Theatre Corporation.[2]
The theater opened on November 28, 1939. Paul Scott had the lease to the theater. Its first film wasBachelor Mother. In February 1947 Interstate Theaters acquired the River Oaks Theatre.[3] In late 1975 the chain Trans-Continental took control from Interstate. TheNew Mexico chain Movie, Inc. took control of the River Oaks Theatre in 1977. The theater's focus changed from first-run films to alternative films such as re-released films, and classic, foreign, cult, and old films. Movie, Inc. later merged with Landmark Theatre Company.[4]
Since 1976, the theater was operated byLandmark Theatres and generally showedforeign language andindependent films, as well as other "art-house" movies.[citation needed] The theater re-opened on March 26, 1977.[4]
On September 9, 1982, there was a screening ofSalo at the theater; this was the third showing in a three-year period. Vice squad officers waited for the screening to conclude and arrested the manager in a raid. The authorities charged him with promoting obscene material but a jury acquitted the manager in an April 1983 trial.[5]
During a January 1983 screening ofFire on the Water there was a dueling protest betweenKu Klux Klan and anti-Klan groups. After the release of the 1985 filmHail Mary there were protests from church groups.[5]
The theater's focus went back to first run films by the mid-1980s due to an increase in video VHS releases and cable.[5] In the mid-1980s the theater owners spent $400,000 on renovation.[6] They removed a group of seats from the downstairs auditorium so a projector could be installed. The seating capacity was changed to 546 seats. The owners changed the balcony into two 125-seat each mini-theaters.[5] The 1939-era carbon-arc projectors were replaced with platter-system projectors.[5] The balcony screens received an ultrastereo sound system, whileDolby was used for the downstairs screens.[7] The theater owners installed a café in the upstairs area and elevators. New paint in gray and blue was applied to the interior.[5] On May 15, 1986, the renovated theater re-opened.[6] October 5, 2012 the theatre showed its final movie on 35mm film, The Master, before being upgraded to 100% digital projection.
In December 1996 premiere of the filmThe Evening Star was held here.[6]
The theater was in theRiver Oaks Shopping Center, on the eastern edge of the prestigiousRiver Oaks subdivision.[2]
In December 2018, Landmark was acquired by Cohen Media Group, changing the theater's ownership.[8]
The theater received the following awards:
The River Oaks Theatre carried on the tradition of showingThe Rocky Horror Picture Show at midnight, on the second Saturday of every month, complete with the "Royal Mystic Order of Chaos" shadow cast.[10]
After rumors circulated that the theater would close, on August 30, 2006,Carolyn Farb announced that she would make an effort to preserve the theatre. She stood in front of the theater with a group of supporters. All wore shirts reading "Save Our Shrines" in black.[11]
In 2006, due to the controversy, theHouston Press ranked Weingarten the "Turkey Landlord of the Year".[12]
On February 25, 2021, theHouston Chronicle reported that the theatre's lease was set to expire on March 31, 2021, and that negotiations with Weingarten Realty, the theatre's landlord, were ongoing.[13] On March 12, 2021, Houston CBS affiliateKHOU reported thatLandmark Theatres had not reached a deal with Weingarten Realty.[14]
There were protests on March 1,[15] and March 7.[16]
On March 15 Landmark announced that it will be forced to close the theater due to Weingarten not responding to its proposals.[17]
It closed on March 25, 2021.[18] The final film screened wasNomadland. It was the sole remaining traditional cinema in the city.[19]
In 2022, Culinary Khancepts, an affiliate of Star Cinema Grill, announced it would be the new tenant and reopen the theater in 2024, following extension renovations.[20][21] The theater officially reopened on October 3, 2024.[22]
29°45′10″N95°24′33″W / 29.7528°N 95.4091°W /29.7528; -95.4091