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Top 25 Halloween Outdoor Movie: Casper

The next stop on our Top 25 Halloween Outdoor Movie list is Casper, the 1995 film based off the Casper the Friendly Ghost cartoons and comic strips starring Bill Pullman and Christina Ricci. Casper is a great selection for your family Halloween movie, or community Halloween outdoor movie celebration! It is appropriate for all ages, and will keep the children entertained as well as parents and grandparents. Here is the theatrical release trailer for the film:

Casper is set in , , and opens with two kids who break into a mansion hoping to get a picture inside, but are scared off when they confront a spiritual apparition. Then, a neurotic and self-entitled old lady Carrigan Crittenden (Cathy Moriarty), moves into the home after it is willed to her as explained by her father’s lawyer Rugg (Ben Stein). An invisible inscription on the wall hinting at buried treasure in the mansion leads Carrigan to hunt for it, but they are soon confronted by the friendly Casper (voiced by Malachi Pearson). When they panic, they summon Casper’s three obnoxious uncles: Stretch (voiced by Joe Nipote), Stinkie (voiced by Joe Alaskey) and Fatso (voiced by Brad Garrett).

Casper the friendly ghostDetermined to find the treasure, they hire a therapist, James Harvey (Bill Pullman) who travels around the country with his daughter Kat (Christina Ricci), as they look for the spirit of his deceased wife Amelia. Casper confronts Kat, and is totally in love, but his obnoxious uncles begin to torment her and her father until they are sucked up into a vacuum cleaner! Casper continues on a heart-felt journey that highlights how friendship and love are the things that tie us together as individuals.

Casper the friendly ghostCasper is the perfect film for your outdoor movie Halloween event, and it presents a few really great opportunities for inflatable movie screens! If you have access to a creepy old mansion (doesn’t everybody?), why not screen the film inside or near it with your Cinebox Home system? Or if you’re screening Casper as a community event, why not have a ghost costume themed night, with a contest for the best dressed ghost! You might have a difficult time determining who has the whitest sheet, but the activity will certainly solidify the event in your community members minds as one that was fun and brought them together with their neighbors and friends. Besides, watching a film on the big screen that hasn’t been in theaters in over a decade is always an exciting event!

If anyone has screened Casper as an outdoor movie, please share your story by posting it to the comments section below! We’d love to hear how your screening turned out. Until next time, happy haunting!

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Resource Residential Uses Open Air Cinema Systems for Dive-In Outdoor Movies

Dive In Cinema

Photo Credit: Open Air Cinema

Major shifts that occurred after the economic downturn, prompted -based property management company Resource Residential to do something different for its communities. And so it was a year ago that the company introduced dive-in theatres at all 52 of its properties, right from , to .

“Everyone was beginning to cut back on their frivolous spending—going out for movies etc. so I was looking for a way to provide something different to our residents and also try to build a better sense of community that includes the whole family,” Harlan Krichman, president Resource Residential, tells MHN.

The salt-water swimming pools at Resource Residential’s properties provided an excellent location for the inflatable screens. “If we could find an outdoor movie system, we could turn our swimming pools into dive-in theaters! And, quite frankly, no one else was doing this,” says Krichman. He says the inflatable screens also provided a great way to utilize the pools. “It shows off our pools and brings people together. Building a sense of community is important to us because if our residents are happy in their community, they will make friends and start to build bonds.” The movies are family friendly so the whole family can come out for the event. “They bring their rafts and sit in their tubes while watching the movie,” he adds.

The area next to the swimming pool is mainly where Resource Residential screens the movies and sporting events. But on occasion—in case of Sunday morning cartoon shows for example—the screens will be set up indoors. “It has to be dark for the visuals to be visible on the screen, so it needs to be indoors sometimes,” explains Krichman.

Krichman purchased Open Air Cinema’s CineBox systems for each of the Resource Residential properties last year. The system includes a giant 12’X7’ screen, which inflates in seconds, along with a digital projector, speakers, mixer and DVD player. “The open air cinema product sets up very easily. You can pack up the whole thing in three boxes,” he says. This feature also allows the company to use the inflatable screens to promote its properties and amenities. “Some of our properties are near college campuses. We can take the screens there and sponsor a free movie night, where we include a five-minute piece on our apartment community and what sets us apart. Also, during our weekly movie nights, as well as a college movie event, we get local stores and businesses to participate in sponsorships of the movie night to provide some revenue that can help offset any costs that may come along with the program. This helps spread the word about other businesses in the broader community,” says Krichman.

Feedback to the dive-theatres has been positive, but it’s not just the residents who have appreciate the dive-in events, the employees like it too. “When they see the reaction of a resident, they become excited about it as well,” says Krichman. The company is now working on having a dive-in event weekly.

He concludes, “We haven’t had people moving in just for the dive-in theater per se, but people do come in and say they have heard about how great a community this is—people know each other and you have community events. It is the combination of the pool and the theater that attracts a lot of prospective renters.”

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Seacoast, Maine: Guerilla Drive-in Movie Theater

Guerrilla Drive-in Movie Theater

Outdoor Movies in Seacoast, MaineAs soon as all the components come together there will be some fun stuff afoot on the for cult movie lovers. Bryan White, editor of Cinema Suicide, along with Larry Clow, plan on launching a nomadic, guerrilla drive-in theater by mid June.

White says he and Clow separately spotted an article on Boing Boing (www.boingboing.net) about a similar project in Pennsylvania. “We thought it was about the coolest thing we’d ever heard of,” says White. The two began plotting immediately.

The way it works: film is projected on a surface that is suitable as a movie screen and faces a parking lot “big enough for a bunch of cars.” The accompanying audio is low power FM transmitted, for pick up on a car radio; “Just like going to the drive-in.”

Trying to make this work was a no-brainer for White who had attempted to interest a number of small theaters in a second-run, camp film series, with movies like “Pump Up The Volume,” and “Heathers.” “Owners would say, ‘why would people come to movie theaters if they can get it on DVD?’ But it’s not about watching the movie. Yes you could do it at home. But you can’t meet new people there. It’s a communal experience,” says White. “We’re not anticipating a mob of people…; just those that come together around this idea, which is bigger than the sum of its parts.”

The gear is ready and the partners are looking for locations. Soon they’ll conduct a few test runs. The final where, when and whats will be posted on the project’s Web site, www.subrosadrivein.com, (still in the making), a day or two pre screening. “It’s going to be totally fun, I know there’s an audience for this. I know people will come.”

By Jeanné McCartin
Source: http://www.seacoastonline.com/articles/20090604-ENTERTAIN-906040320

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