According To The variety) Westwood Village’s Bruin Theatre and Fox Village Theatre will screen their last films — for now — on Thursday as Regency Theatres’ lease comes to an end at the two historic Los Angeles venues.
Opened in 1937, the streamline-moderne style Bruin is being represented by commercial real estate firm Newmark, which repped the sale of the Fox Village. With 670 seats, it’s smaller than the Fox Village Theatre across the street, which currently has about 1400 seats.
Both venues have a long history of hosting movie premieres, while the Bruin also played an important role in Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.”
“The owners thank the Golin Family and Regency Theaters for our relationship with them for the last 14 years. The owners are currently evaluating future opportunities for The Bruin,” said Owen Solomon, a representative for the building’s owners. The 1931 Fox Village is set to reopen at an unspecified date after being acquired in February by director Jason Reitman and a consortium of partners including Christopher Nolan, Rian Johnson, Steven Spielberg, Chloe Zhao, J.J. Abrams and more. The plan is to add a bar and restaurant and make use of the filmmakers’ personal collections of prints and memorabilia.
Regency Theatres president Lyndon Golin said they are “unaware of any specifics of future plans” for the Bruin.
Representatives for Reitman did not respond to request for comment on whether he might become involved with the Bruin in addition to the Village.
Once the most popular moviegoing destination on the Westside of Los Angeles, Westwood has lost nearly all of its numerous theaters over the past decades. The Landmark Westwood on Broxton and the iPic on Wilshire are the last remaining venues in Westwood Village. AMC’s nearby Century City 15 is now the most prominent exhibitor in the area.