even though it was closed because it was unstable. Those were the days when they weren't as strict about worrying if the whole thing collapsed. Double-features - remember those? They went the way of taking chances with unstable structures.
I remember seeing seeing it on Saturday, October 3, here in the midwest. It was for the matinee, and I got to the theater two hours before the doors even opened, and already there was a line.
It seemed that every kid in my hometown was there and the management opened the second balcony, even though it was closed because it was unstable. Those were the days when they weren't as strict about worrying if the whole thing collapsed.
It was a double-feature, and the first movie was a western, although I no longer recall its title. Double-features - remember those? They went the way of taking chances with unstable structures.
HOUSE OF DARK SHADOWS -- Horror movies are measured by their capacity to thrill, chill, and mystify. This feature, based on the gothic TV soap opera, fails; the only mystery is its great popularity with teenagers. They seem to enjoy the wooden performances, hack writing, and stilted direction as camp humor, and to delight in the gory vampire scenes.
Later, maybe in December, I saw HODS again at a drive-in as part of a double-bill with the western DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE, starring Frank Sinatra. Maybe that was the western you saw. Lois Nettleton was in it, too. I don't recall much else about it than that.