July 29: Starlite Drive-In Theatre, Bloomington IN

It’s Day 210 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It started with an easy one-hour drive from Franklin IN to the Starlite Drive-In Theatre south of Bloomington IN.

The Starlite opened in 1955, built by Carl and Ruth Stewart, who operated it for 48 years until Ruth passed away in 2003. According to his 95th birthday salute in 2014 in the Bloomington Herald-Times (subscription required), Carl “took pride in making the best popcorn and getting to know the families.”

The next owner was Cindy Jarvis and family. According to Indiana Public Media, “She wanted to have people think they were coming back to 1955 when they entered the drive-in, so it was her decision to not use the credit card machines.” Jarvis had to commute from out of town, and the Starlite’s had deteriorated a bit when it was sold in December 2013.

The next owner was a local guy, Mark Freeman, and his family. Indiana Public Media said he went right to work fixing panels on the screen, fixed the water and gas lines, added fresh gravel and made other cosmetic improvements. He added a fence to prevent patrons from walking in front of the projector, which inspired more work. “Once we did that,” Freeman said, “we started looking and said ‘Wow.” So we just made this patio here.” The patio, in front of the projection room, has tables and chairs.

Freeman also added credit card payments and a digital projector, which made it a little odd that he sold the Starlite this February. (I wrote about that when it happened.) Now the drive-in’s owner is the Brent Barnhart family and KJB Theaters. Barnhart told the Herald-Times, “I’m thrilled to take up the baton and run with it.”

Ah, it’s nice to have another drone video to share. This one’s was posted in June 2015 and is unusual that it’s audio is the real sound of the drone. I’ve been around enough of them to verify – they’re noisy little things.

I feel bad that my timing made me miss the Starlite’s many special shows – this coming Tuesday will be Forrest Gump, and Wednesday will be Enter the Dragon. But my wish from the night before went unanswered, and I sat through The Emoji Movie for the second straight evening. As I type two days after this movie’s release, IMDB voters have already pushed it to 22nd place of the worst of all time, six slots worse than Monster a-Go-Go and considerably worse than Battlefield Earth. Telling fact: Sir Patrick Stewart is the voice of Poop.

Miles Today / Total:  51 / 26123 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Emoji Movie / 125

Nearby Restaurant: How can you not love a place named Darn Good Soup? I mean, you know right away what you’re going to get, plus there’s homemade bread. I had the Cheesy Tomatillo followed by a scoop of chocolate lover’s ice cream. Simple and great!

Where I Virtually Stayed: The Hilton Garden Inn is a perennial favorite of mine whenever I find one, partly because my Hilton Honors status gets me free breakfast there. The HGI here is taller than most, six stories, and it has a parking garage. That’s all probably because Indiana University is so close by. My room had the full set of amenities, the staff was friendly, and the breakfast buffet was great.

Only in Bloomington: Indiana University in Bloomington features a 12,000-pound brain, “the largest anatomically accurate brain sculpture in the U.S.” near the entrance to its Psychology Building. In 2015, they made a good thing even better by adding an interactive lighting display which “will respond to movement and feature shifting colors and patterns, which will change with the seasons or to recognize special events, such as pink for Breast Cancer Awareness Month or crimson for IU sports victories.”

Next stop: Holiday Drive-In Theatre, Mitchell IN.

July 28: Canary Creek Cinemas, Franklin IN

It’s Day 209 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. It was time for one last drive through Indianapolis, going from M.E.L.S. at the Starlite Drive-In Theatre, just north of Mechanicsburg, to the Canary Creek Cinemas in Franklin IN, in less than an hour and a half.

Mike Rembusch built the Canary Creek Cinemas indoor complex in 2000, but he always wanted to own a drive-in. He straddled both worlds in 2004 when he built a 60 by 30 foot screen facing a parking lot and pointed a projector out of a back room. It opened in late September for a few weeks, and its first full season was in 2005. Since then, the drive-in has operated every summer, showing double features on weekends.

According to The Daily Journal of Franklin, the lot to the west of Rembusch’s new movie complex had been covered in stone as the building went up. “As Rembusch looked out over the area, he thought it looked perfect for a drive-in.”

“It was being unused,” he told The Daily Journal. “It was shaped like a drive-in, looked like a drive-in. The screen could face the right direction, and it’s worked out very well that way.”

The Canary Creek is just like all those old drive-ins that added an indoor theater, except reversed. The 8-screen complex hosts the concessions and rest rooms for the drive-in as well as its projector.

In 2010, the Indianapolis Star wrote that Rembusch’s father had built five drive-in theaters in Indiana. “I think people are still drawn to drive-in movies because they’re so informal,” Mike told the Star. “You can come as you are and just relax for the night, and people just seem to enjoy being outdoors.”

The movie this night was the premiere of The Emoji Movie. I’m not sure whether it was so bad it was good, or so bad that it’s just bad. I really hope I don’t have to watch it again to decide.

Miles Today / Total:  63 / 26072 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Emoji Movie / 124

Nearby Restaurant: For a hometown diner experience, I turned to Ann’s Restaurant. I enjoyed the breaded tenderloin (don’t call it schnitzel) sandwich with homemade potato chips and a side salad. According to the menu, money from the restaurant supports Tara Treatment Center, an alcohol and drug rehabilitation facility. Good thing I only drank iced tea with that sandwich.

Where I Virtually Stayed: The Quality Inn in Franklin is right next to a Waffle House, so that’s a plus. My room had a comfortable bed and the full set of amenities. Breakfast was good enough to skip the Waffle House. It was all good.

Only in Franklin: In its Dec. 2, 1940 issue, Life magazine spotlighted Franklin in the feature A Small Town’s Saturday Night. It followed the farming Dunn family for “a cross between carnival time, buying spree and holiday travel.” No drive-ins yet, but the Dunn boys enjoyed a matinee at the indoor Artcraft Theatre watching Pals of the Silver Sage.

Next stop: Starlite Drive-In Theatre, Bloomington IN.

July 27: M.E.L.S. at the Starlite Drive-In Theatre, Thorntown IN

Drive-In concession stand and screen at twilight

Photo from the M.E.L.S.’ Facebook page

It’s Day 208 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I went from a half hour southeast of Indianapolis (the Skyline Drive-In Theatre east of Shelbyville) to a half hour northwest of Indianapolis. Add in the time it took to drive the interstate loop through Indianapolis, and it was almost an hour and a half before I arrived at M.E.L.S. at the Starlite Drive-In Theatre, just north of Mechanicsburg, although the drive-in claims its home town as Thorntown nine miles away.

According to a July 1998 article in the Indianapolis Star, Harry Ziegler founded the drive-in in 1946, showing movies “on a 16mm projector he operated from a chicken coop.” Some sources say it was the Outdoor Drive-In at that point, but by the end of the decade it was definitely the Frankfort-Lebanon. By that time, projectionist Harry Boyland was running two huge Motiograph 35mm units in a job he held until a few weeks before he died in July 1988.

Ziegler put the Frankfort-Lebanon up for sale in 1970, and sold it to John Osborne in 1972. The screen used to sit on the south side of the property until a tornado came through; it was rebuilt on its current location on the west side. In 1986, Osborne told the Star that he treasured the remaining posts of that first screen, “watched by patrons who sat on benches.” At some point, Osborne changed the name to the Starlite. (It may also have been known as the Mechanicsburg Drive-In.)

Mike and Melanie Roth bought the place in 1994, fixed it up and named it Mel’s after Melanie. The 1998 article said that business was already booming. Rick and Elaine Dearduff bought the drive-in in 2003; that may have been when they added the periods to make it M.E.L.S. A Journal & Courier article from May 2017 said they were running a Kickstarter campaign to finance a digital projector, but since the drive-in’s been showing current movies all season, they probably found their new projector.

Maps and schedules conspired to make this Thursday a night off, my first since June 1. There are enough weekend-only drive-ins in central Indiana that I just couldn’t fit them all in those magic two or three days. At least I got a chance to turn in early to get ready for another long string of movie nights under the stars.

Miles Today / Total:  75 / 26009 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 123

Nearby Restaurant: As I’ve said before, a nice thing about relatively short drives is that I arrive in plenty of time for breakfast food. Flap-Jack’s in Lebanon (between Indianapolis and Mechanicsburg) is pretty much what you’d expect from the name, a restaurant that specializes in buttermilk pancakes. I enjoyed the Farmhouse Benedict with a pork tenderloin, plus some silver dollar flapjacks, just to stay on theme.

Where I Virtually Stayed: There are no hotels in Mechanicsburg or Thorntown. The closest are in Frankfort to the north and Lebanon to the south. I picked Lebanon, closer to my next stop, for its Holiday Inn Express. My room had the full set of amenities, breakfast was HIE standard, and the hot tub looked inviting.

Only in Thorntown: A few miles north of Thorntown on US 52 is an unusual roadside marker commemorating the first successful Caesarean section in Indiana. It reads, “On the kitchen table of this house, the morning of November 6, 1880, Mrs. Luther Lucas, a farmer’s wife, was delivered of a healthy infant son, after a mid-line incision made by Dr. Moses Baker, a pioneer physician-surgeon of Stockwell. Observed by six attending doctors who refused responsibility for its success or failure, it became the first in Indiana medical history in which both mother and child lived.” According to Roadside America, the house is gone, but the marker remains.

Next stop: Canary Creek Cinemas, Franklin IN.