Feb. 16: Solano Theater, Concord CA

Solano Drive-In screen at twilight

photo by Thomas Hawk, from the Carload Flickr pool

It’s Day 47 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, and it took me almost an hour and a half to skirt the east side of the San Francisco Bay area from San Jose to the Solano Theater in Concord CA.

It was a rainy day, but it cleared up pretty well by the time the evening hit. The drive-in wasn’t as packed and the sky wasn’t as cloudless, but I’m glad I finally got a chance to run Thomas Hawk’s amazing photo of the place with its twilight colors and evergreens lit by the street behind the screen.

Concord was first served by the Contra Costa Motor-In, which opened some time before 1949. That theater persevered into the 1970s. By 1984, the Motor-In was gone and the Solano Twin had taken its place. The Solano closed after the 2004 season, but reopened in May 2007.

One of the distant echoes of the original drive-in boom was the idea of an attendant bringing food to the car. Just a few months ago, I wrote about an earlier proposed system of two-way speakers for “phoning in” a concession stand order. The Solano brought that up to date. The ticket booth folks supply a menu so you can text an order to be delivered from the snack bar.

Even though it was just Thursday, the Solano had a new release for me. I was very grateful for that.

Miles Today / Total:  62 / 5467 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Fist Fight / 35

Nearby Restaurant: There’s nothing all that close in the mostly industrial area surrounding the Solano. Four miles away in the Sunvalley Shopping Center, I was drawn to an unassuming little place called the Tomi Japanese Seafood Buffet. They had me at the word ‘buffet,’ but when I found out that it was partly an excuse for dim sum, I was happy I made the trip.

Where I Virtually Stayed: I’m a Hilton Honors Gold member. That gives me a free breakfast at Hilton Garden Inns, which are more common, but the best perk comes when I can find a true Hilton with an Executive Lounge with a light dinner and drinks in the evening and a really nice breakfast in the morning. So it might not be worth it for you, but staying at the Hilton Concord was definitely worth it for me.

Only in Concord: In Martinez, just northwest of Concord, at the corner of Alhambra and Masonic/Thompson, there’s a small rock with a small plaque. It commemorates the first martini. The plaque reads, “On this site in 1874, Julio Richelieu, Bartender, served up the first Martini when a miner came into his saloon with a fistful of nuggets and asked for something special. He was served a ‘Martinez Special.’ After three or four drinks, however, the ‘Z’ would get very much in the way. The drink consisted of 2/3 gin, 1/3 vermouth, a dash or orange bitters, poured over crushed ice and served with an olive.”

Next Stop: Lakeport Auto Movies Drive In, Lakeport CA.

Feb. 15: Capitol 6 Drive-In, San Jose CA

It’s Day 46 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, and my first in the San Francisco Bay area. It took over two hours to drive from little Madera to the Capitol 6 Drive-In in San Jose CA

The Capitol was one of the last in the primary wave of drive-in theater construction. When it opened in May 1971, there were already six other drive-ins in San Jose. A decade later, it was one of three survivors along with the El Rancho and the San Jose. Now it’s the only one left.

Have you ever heard of Brazilian cheese rolls? I hadn’t until I got a cup of pao do queijo at the concession stand. Not sweet, but very cheesy! They also had hot Cheetos mixed with popcorn, but I’ve got to draw the line somewhere.

With six screens to choose from, at least I got a break from The Lego Batman Movie, which was on only two of them. Several movies I would have preferred were on later, but the only early film I hadn’t seen was Fifty Shades Darker. How was it? As reviewer Amy Nicholson put it, the Fifty Shades movies “aren’t so bad they’re good. They’re so brilliantly bad they’re genius.”

Miles Today / Total:  124 / 5405 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Fifty Shades Darker / 34

Nearby Restaurant: Sometimes, you just take whatever’s across the street. In this case, that’s Tony Di Maggio’s Pizza, home of the world’s best stromboli. Not only was the food great (as in wonderful taste and as in huge), I could look out the window across Monterey Road to see the Capitol’s screens.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Every hotel close by was either undesirable or excessively priced. That’s what I told myself as I ponied up a few more twenties to stay at the historic Hayes Mansion three miles away from the Capitol. It may be the first hotel I’ve visited this trip that has its own Wikipedia page, not to mention a pamphlet with a self-guided walking tour. I could get used to this!

Only in San Jose: According to the San Jose Mercury News, one day in May 2009 the San Jose Fire Department’s hazmat team was summoned to an AT&T call center to rescue workers who had been overcome while trying to clean out the office mini-fridge. Over 300 employees were evacuated, including seven treated at area hospitals. A total of 50 firefighters and 18 emergency vehicles responded to the two-alarm incident.

Next Stop: Solano Theater, Concord CA.

Feb. 14: Madera Drive In Theatre, Madera CA

It’s Day 45 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It took almost three hours to drive from San Luis Obispo to the Madera Drive In Theatre in Madera CA.

There aren’t too many drive-ins that have had three names. The Madera opened as the El Rio Drive-In in 1948. According to the drive-in’s page at CinemaTreasures, it was purchased by the Gran brothers in 1972. From there, all I know is what I read in my reference books. Some time between 1964 and 1984, possibly at the time of the sale, the name changed to the Park Vu Drive-In. It became the Madera after 1995 but when? This 2003 photo shows a Madera Drive-In sign at the ticket booth, but this 2005 photo still shows a faded Park Vu sign.

When was the second screen added? That 2003 photo shows the smaller second screen in the background, just as it looks today. The Park Vu was listed as a single-screen theater in 1984, so either the second was added within the following two decades or that listing was inaccurate.

What’s worse than seeing the same movie four nights in a row? If it’s good, like The Lego Batman Movie, it’s worse when there are no movies at all. The Madera will reopen in “Spring 2017,” but instead of meeting new friends at the concession stand, I had to spend this Valentine’s night alone.

Miles Today / Total:  155 / 5281 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 33

Nearby Restaurant: It had been too long since I’d had some decent hummus. (Yes, I like hummus.) I was really happy to find a hidden gem of a restaurant in Madera, the Kebab Grill. Sure, my chicken kebab was warm and spicy and yummy, but what I remember most was my side dish of hummus and pita slices for dipping. There’s nothing quite like it.

Where I Virtually Stayed: It was just three miles up the road, in daylight since the Madera Drive-In was still closed for the season, so the Hampton Inn was a nice, safe choice. Clean room, fridge and microwave, and a nice breakfast in the morning.

Only in Madera: The North Fork Rancheria of Mono Indians would like to build a “Las Vegas-style” casino on a 305-acre site just north of Madera. That plan hit a roadblock last December when an appeals court invalidated Gov. Jerry Brown’s authorization to use the land for gaming. Some Madera residents objected to the approval process for this parcel of land that’s 36 miles from the tribe’s home, According to the Fresno Bee, “The North Fork tribe and the federal government wanted to use the Madera-area land for gaming because the tribe has no land other than an area designated for housing.”

Next Stop: Capitol 6 Drive-In, San Jose CA.