I was up in Timmins one year with my family and we spent Halloween collecting candy and then everyone packed into a van to go to the local drive in. We stayed up watching cheesy horror films with Vincent Price and all the oldies back to back until about three in the morning. I don't remember much because I fell asleep after falling off a sugar high about half an hour into the first movie and then slept the rest of the time. Nothing like waking in a daze to big giant images of Vincent Price on a big giant screen in the middle of the northern wilderness.
That's just the mutual masturbation area where you didn't care about the movie, you just needed some time alone with your date to get fingerblasted or get your pole tugged.
It was sloped at every drive-in I went to - so you'd see over the canteen/projection room.
Half the fun was queueing for burgers, chips (fries), and/or pizza, and coke between the two features. The other half was sneaking beer in. Then the other half was...... what was I talking about?
One did here! We went to see this there last month, because they were doing free monster and horror movies on weeknights in October.
It was even the subtitled version!
The cool thing now is they don't do the hanging the speaker in the window thing anymore. You just tune your car to a radio frequency they tell you when you enter.
The car radio thing only came in here (Oz) in their twilight years just as VCRs and VHS rental became a thing, but it was fabulous to hear a movie IN STEREO! with decent Bass.
Most of the ones that I used to frequent are now shopping centre carparks.
This would not be the configuration the drive-in would be in during operation. This looks like some daytime parking situation, car dealer storage?
There is a strong shadow, daytime so the screen wouldn't be able to be seen. Many of the cars are parked sideways! Some of the cars are parked facing a wall where they can't see the screen whatsoever. This is storage
I agree. This is NOT a drive in theater. The screen is way too small and it should be rectangular, not square. Also, about half the cars are parked in ways where they can't see the screen.
This is either a car storage area that had the screen shopped in or someone told an AI "make me a vintage photo of a 1950s drive in," and the AI added the screen and the (badly parked) cars without understanding how a drive in is supposed to work.
You're half right. This is a drive-in theater. It was called the Moonlite Outdoor Theatre and was around long after the 1950s. However this is during the off season, and during the that period it was used by a nearby automaker for vehicle storage. Additionally, drive-in theaters (which still exist btw) don't show films during the day. The first showing is usually at dusk.
It's almost like some people aren't there to watch the movie at all?
What could they possibly do? What could teenagers do that they couldn't do at home with mom and dad and little pest of a brother/sister?
Cool and all but such a stupid concept. Watching on a phone would make more sense
Edit: regarding screen size. As the screen is so tiny because those fucking cars need so much space. Of course they didnt have OLED 4K 160Hz smartphones back then...
Have you ever been in an outdoors movie theatre without a car? It's different and great, because you're truly outside. Also the dimensions are like in normal theatres.
Yeah I think they were a cool experience. They still exist in some cities too. I know in Texas, if you google "metroplex" drive in, you'll usually find one that is operational
I'm pretty sure this is the same one we went to when we were kids! Though not at the same time as this picture. It's really neat to see what it looked like then.
Texted my family to see what it is but I may not find out for over a week lol.