• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertising
  • Join PGM
Pepperdine Graphic

Pepperdine Graphic

  • News
    • Good News
  • Sports
    • Hot Shots
  • Life & Arts
  • Perspectives
    • Advice Column
    • Waves Comic
  • GNews
    • Staff Spotlights
    • First and Foremost
    • Allgood Food
    • Pepp in Your Step
    • DunnCensored
    • Beyond the Statistics
  • Special Publications
    • 5 Years In
    • L.A. County Fires
    • Change in Sports
    • Solutions Journalism: Climate Anxiety
    • Common Threads
    • Art Edition
    • Peace Through Music
    • Climate Change
    • Everybody Has One
    • If It Bleeds
    • By the Numbers
    • LGBTQ+ Edition: We Are All Human
    • Where We Stand: One Year Later
    • In the Midst of Tragedy
  • Currents
    • Currents Spring 2025
    • Currents Fall 2024
    • Currents Spring 2024
    • Currents Winter 2024
    • Currents Spring 2023
    • Currents Fall 2022
    • Spring 2022: Moments
    • Fall 2021: Global Citizenship
    • Spring 2021: Beauty From Ashes
    • Fall 2020: Humans of Pepperdine
    • Spring 2020: Everyday Feminism
    • Fall 2019: Challenging Perceptions of Light & Dark
  • Podcasts
    • On the Other Hand
    • RE: Connect
    • Small Studio Sessions
    • SportsWaves
    • The Graph
    • The Melanated Muckraker
  • Print Editions
  • NewsWaves
  • Sponsored Content
  • Digital Deliveries
  • DPS Crime Logs

Any given Saturday

February 13, 2003 by Pepperdine Graphic

Each Saturday evening hordes of Pepperdine students flock to the movies. But which theater in this area is best? The Graphic took to the streets to find out.
By Peter Celauro
Assistant A&E Editor 

As the sun sets over Malibu on a weekend evening, a peculiar weekly ritual begins.

Students being set loose from their late classes or waking up from their afternoon naps begin to formulate plans for the evening. But options are limited for those under 21, particularly in a town that shuts down almost before dark.

Photo/Pete CelauroBy 9:30, would-be partiers begin to realize that there’s not much going on around here and there’s not much time to go anywhere else. By 10, many exasperated students throw up their arms and settle for the ever-present backup plan: going to a movie.

Ironically enough, this is when the confusion really begins. Pepperdine lies nestled in the middle of a myriad of movie theaters, each of which prompts a host of questions of its own.

Will the movie I want be showing there? Is it faster to drive to Santa Monica or through the canyon? Will I pay an arm and a leg to get in? The mental gymnastics alone are enough to make some moviegoers give up and stay home.

Until now. As Pepperdine’s Los Angeles entertainment resource, the Graphic has taken the time to do the research and get answers regarding all the perplexing issues a moviegoer could ever hope to ponder.  

And yes, you will pay an arm and a leg.

The New Malibu Theater gives Pepperdine’s population a break: their $6.50 student discount is the lowest price a student can find within 20 miles of campus. Those living in Calabasas can get off reasonably well, as the Edwards Cinema “Grand Palace” charges $7. One place to avoid, however, is the Mann Criterion Theatre on 3rd Street. At $9.50 a ticket, it’s a wonder the place can pay to keep its giant light-up sign illuminated.

Photo/Peter CelauroThe Mann doesn’t stop the swindle there. Its $5.75 large bucket of popcorn is more expensive than that of any theater surveyed, and its $4 large soda ties with the Calabasas theater.

Those nay-sayers who cry “but movie theater food is always expensive!” will be pleasantly surprised to hear that’s not always the case. 3rd Street’s AMC 7 charges only $2.75 for a large soft drink, and its hot dogs are warm and fresh. However, getting your hands on one is no small task; AMC 7’s food counter is small and prone to customer congestion during busy hours. Hungry viewers are advised to arrive at the theater at least 20 minutes early to allow for unforeseen traffic jams.

One place students won’t mind getting to 20 minutes early is the Edwards Cinema’s “Grand Palace.” The six-screen multiplex is beautifully decorated inside, with marble designs on the floor and hand-painted murals on the walls. The gorgeous foyer also has tables and chairs where patrons can sit and absorb the ambiance of the room and the screams of noisy kids.

Photo/Peter CelauroAmbiance isn’t everything, however, especially for someone looking for an obscure title. For that,  discriminating students will want to visit the Broadway Theater on 3rd Street. The four-screener is dingy inside and fairly expensive, but it screens obscure movies (such as Jerry Seinfeld’s “Comedian”) and films that viewers may have missed the first time around. For the less-mainstream taste, Broadway is the most likely to satisfy.

Students who just need a two-hour study break or a quick movie fix, however, will find there’s no place like home. It may not have 16 screens (like the AMC Promenade 16 in Woodland Hills) or videogames (like those theaters in Santa Monica), but the New Malibu Theater is the least damaging to the gas tank or the pocketbook. And besides all that, where else can you watch a movie with the actor who starred in it?

February 13, 2003

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Primary Sidebar

Categories

  • Featured
  • News
  • Life & Arts
  • Perspectives
  • Sports
  • Podcasts
  • G News
  • COVID-19
  • Fall 2021: Global Citizenship
  • Everybody Has One
  • Newsletters

Footer

Pepperdine Graphic Media
Copyright © 2025 · Pepperdine Graphic

Contact Us

Advertising
(310) 506-4318
peppgraphicadvertising@gmail.com

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
(310) 506-4311
peppgraphicmedia@gmail.com
Student Publications
Pepperdine University
24255 Pacific Coast Hwy
Malibu, CA 90263
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube