Does San Jose know it still has a downtown movie theater?

Does San Jose know it still has a downtown movie theater?

a year ago
Anonymous $Gb26S9Emwz

https://www.mercurynews.com/2023/02/23/does-san-jose-know-it-still-has-a-downtown-movie-theater/

Scott Guggenheim is taken aback when he hears about people living in or around downtown San Jose who  complain there’s no movie theater in the area. And that’s because he and his wife, Shannon Guggenheim, have been working tirelessly to keep movies going at 3Below Theaters on South Second Street since taking over the former Camera 3 space in 2018.

At 3Below,  you can find a variety of live shows, movie events like singalongs and even performing arts classes that bounced back to some degree since COVID-19 restrictions were lifted. But despite more people living downtown and being just blocks from San Jose State University, movie audiences have been dismal for 3Below’s first-run movie lineup — consisting mostly of independent fare that would appeal to older moviegoers like “Everything Everywhere All At Once,” “Till,” and “Triangle of Sadness.”

Does San Jose know it still has a downtown movie theater?

Feb 24, 2023, 3:36pm UTC
https://www.mercurynews.com/2023/02/23/does-san-jose-know-it-still-has-a-downtown-movie-theater/ > Scott Guggenheim is taken aback when he hears about people living in or around downtown San Jose who  complain there’s no movie theater in the area. And that’s because he and his wife, Shannon Guggenheim, have been working tirelessly to keep movies going at 3Below Theaters on South Second Street since taking over the former Camera 3 space in 2018. > At 3Below,  you can find a variety of live shows, movie events like singalongs and even performing arts classes that bounced back to some degree since COVID-19 restrictions were lifted. But despite more people living downtown and being just blocks from San Jose State University, movie audiences have been dismal for 3Below’s first-run movie lineup — consisting mostly of independent fare that would appeal to older moviegoers like “Everything Everywhere All At Once,” “Till,” and “Triangle of Sadness.”