Saturday, March 24, 2012

LA Times "Utah theater chain turns 'The Hunger Games' into an event"

Check out what the LA Times says about my job!!  Not just the place I work but WHAT I DO THERE and why we are so awesome!!!!
Utah theater chain turns 'The Hunger Games' into an event

Friday, March 23, 2012

Whats happening at the Megaplex





‘Hunger Games' fans hit theaters early | ksl.com

 Utahns hungry for Hunger Games

 http://www.abc4.com/s/mYqvjwovIk2jD0GKChllJg.cspx#.T2ySG40ERvM.bl

Monday, March 12, 2012

I am in love with this little guy.  Go see John Carter and find out why.  I will call him Bruno.
It will also make you love Lake Powell just a little bit more.  Its a little bit of Shrek I, and III meets Princess Bride meets Jar Jar Binks.  But when you think that Edgar Rice Burrows is the father of  Sci Fi  --  and that this was penned 100 years ago  -- it is truly the beginning.  Sadly, attendance needs to pick up since it was #2 at the box office for opening weekend.  

"A Princess of Mars" was originally published as "Under the Moons of Mars" by Norman Bean (Edgar Rice Burroughs' pseudonym) in The All-Story (six pulp magazine issues February - July, 1912). Burroughs was originally afraid that he might be ridiculed for writing such a tale, so he decided to use a pen name. The pseudonym was supposed to be a pun "Normal Bean" (as in "I'm a normal being") to reassure people, but the man who typeset the text thought it was a mistake, so he changed it to "Norman". However, Burroughs' fears turned out to be unfounded: the story and its sequels, collectively known as the "Barsoom series", were almost as popular (and arguably more influential) as those of his most famous creation, Tarzan. - sourced from IMDB.com  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0401729/trivia?tab=tr&item=tr0738847