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Cinedome Paradiso: Fade-Out Is a Loss for O.C. Moviegoers

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One of the last great cinemas in Southern California, the Century Cinedome in Orange, has closed its doors.

The Cinedome had been an Orange County cultural icon for nearly 30 years. “Star Wars,” “Superman” and “Raiders of the Lost Ark” all had first-run exhibitions at the Domes, as they were called. They were two sprawling, spherically shaped auditoriums with unparalleled acoustics and screen size that were as much of an experience as the film itself.

It was the Cinedome that paved the way for multiplexes like Edwards 21 at Irvine Spectrum and AMC 30 at the Block. But somehow they never matched Cinedome’s excitement.

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You always remembered seeing a movie at the Cinedome, eating the popcorn, sipping a Coke, playing a game in the arcade. Heck, even the sticky floors made a movie seem better.

I remember seeing “Raiders” there with my dad when I was 10. I felt like I was right in the Peruvian temple in the beginning and even lifted my feet when the snakes appeared in the Well of the Souls. The Cinedome engulfed you, made you an active participant in your own imagination.

The Cinedome was converted to a bargain theater in November to make room for the more generic and stale cinemas across the Orange Freeway.

I only saw one movie at the Domes after the conversion, “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.” I now regret that it was that film with which I said goodbye to one of the last great theaters of all time.

MATT KLIPFEL

Tustin

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