Los Angeles Times

Oscar host flubs theater location

Chris Rock says his bit was shot in Compton, which has no cinemas.

- By Ryan Faughnder ryan. faughnder @ latimes. com

During a comedy bit at the 88th Academy Awards on Sunday night, Chris Rock said he trekked to a Compton movie theater to interview black moviegoers about largely white Oscar contenders.

The resulting segment got big laughs as Rock asked cinema fans if they had seen, or even heard of, movies such as “The Big Short,” “Brooklyn” and “Bridge of Spies.”

But there was one problem with the routine — that theater isn’t in Compton. Rock’s video, filmed about a week before the ceremony, took place in front of the Rave Cinema 15 ( formerly Magic Johnson Theatres) at Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza.

In fact, as The Times has reported, Compton doesn’t have a movie theater within its city limits, and it hasn’t in decades.

That fact resurfaced last year during the release of “Straight Outta Compton,” Universal Pictures’ hit f ilm about the members of the gangsta rap group N. W. A. Though the movie grossed $ 200 million globally, it couldn’t be shown in the rappers’ hometown.

Compton could get its own theater soon. City officials have proposed the constructi­on of a 14- screen, 60,000- square- foot movie theater as part of a larger entertainm­ent complex for the area historical­ly neglected by the film industry.

Los Angeles- based Maya Cinemas, which specialize­s in theaters in predominan­tly Latino communitie­s, would f inance, build and operate the multiplex. Compton’s City Council voted last month to move forward on the developmen­t.

For now though, Compton residents still have to venture to Baldwin Hills or Paramount to see the latest theatrical releases.

The Rave cinema, once known as the Magic Johnson Crenshaw 15, has its own noteworthy history.

Earvin “Magic” Johnson’s cinema venture Magic Johnson Theatres became a Baldwin Hills business success story in the mid- 1990s for the former Lakers star, who had advocated for more entertainm­ent options in largely black communitie­s.

But Johnson sold his theater company in 2004, and the Magic Johnson Crenshaw 15 multiplex closed in 2010. It was renovated and reopened the following year by Rave Motion Pictures, now owned by Plano, Texas, cinema chain Cinemark.

Producers of the Oscars telecast were not immediatel­y available for comment.

 ?? Jean- Marc Giboux
Getty I mages ?? CHRIS ROCK’S OSCAR VIDEO was f ilmed at a Baldwin Hills theater. Above, the cinema in 1995.
Jean- Marc Giboux Getty I mages CHRIS ROCK’S OSCAR VIDEO was f ilmed at a Baldwin Hills theater. Above, the cinema in 1995.

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