Theater News
Dallas' revered Inwood Theatre closes temporarily due to lease issues
A venerable Dallas movie theater is temporarily closed: Landmark's Inwood Theatre, one of the city's oldest and most revered theaters, is currently sporting a lock-out notice on its door, and the theater's phone recording says it is "temporarily closed."
The notice from landlord Inwood Village says that the lease, which dates back to 1988, was terminated as of February 19 due to a default.
A Landmark spokesperson did not respond to inquiries, and a spokesperson for the landlord said they were unavailable to comment at this time. Maybe they're getting a second chance.
Built in 1947, the Inwood is one of the last surviving old-time movie theaters in Dallas. As CultureMap noted in its Best Movie Theaters roundup, the theater's marquee is a landmark in the neighborhood, and most of the theater's original murals had been restored to their original glory.
While the original 1,100-seat auditorium is long gone, it was replaced with three smaller theaters, each with unique charms. The most notable is the downstairs Screening Lounge Auditorium, which at the time brought new definition to moviegoing comfort with an array of couches, love seats, and beanbag-style chairs called LoveSacs.
The programming ranges from mainstream fare to midnight movies on Friday and Saturday, showing such cult films as The Rocky Horror Picture Show and The Room. And don't forget about the attached Inwood Lounge, where you can grab a pre- or post-show martini.
Landmark Theatres is the nation’s largest specialized theater chain, dedicated to independent cinema and high-quality mainstream film with 200 screens in 23 markets. Each location has its own distinct personality.
In 2018 the company was added to the Cohen Media Group, an independent theatrical exhibition, distribution, and production company with more than eight Academy Award nominations and a Best Foreign Language film win.
The movie theater world has been in a major churn since the pandemic, with closures and forced reinvention. Landmark has acquired theaters but has also had rent payment issues at its Denver location and seen closures in Milwaukee and Albany, NY.
In a February 6 story, Inwood manager Linda Winbigler told The Advocate that the theater still hadn't bounced back from the pandemic.
The Inwood is the only Landmark property in Dallas. At one time, the Magnolia in the West Village was also a Landmark theater, but it closed in March 2021. It became a Violet Crown theater in 2022, then was acquired by EVO in 2023.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Alex Bentley contributed to this story.