Feb. 9: Mission Tiki Drive-in Theatre, Montclair CA

It’s Day 40 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I continue to comb the Los Angeles area, driving a half hour due east from the Vineland to the Mission Tiki Drive-in Theatre in Montclair CA.

This is the fourth California drive-in run by the same folks who also run the South Bay in San Diego and the Rubidoux and Van Buren in Riverside. I’ll get to visit one of their place just once more when I reach the Redwood in suburban Salt Lake City UT.

The Mission Tiki opened as the single-screen Mission Drive-In in 1956, when the city was known as Monte Vista. They replaced the original screen with four new ones in 1975. The name changed to the Mission Tiki in 2006 during major refurbishing, including FM transmitters and Technalight projection system. The parking lot was repaved, the ticket booths were remodeled to look like tiki huts, a Maui statue garden was added, and the concession stand was remodeled to match the tiki theme.

My week of repeated viewings continued. Again, I had four screens from which to choose. Again, I had already seen each early movie. I couldn’t bear Resident Evil: The Final Chapter for the four time in a week, so I picked the relatively inoffensive A Dog’s Purpose.

Miles Today / Total:  18 / 4877 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: A Dog’s Purpose / 30

Nearby Restaurant: Across the street, there’s a Dairy Queen, Little Caesar’s, and Panda Express. So you can tell that it was worth driving about two and a half miles to reach something more authentic, the Mix Bowl Cafe in neighboring Pomona. Real Thai noodles, spicy sauces, and a price that wasn’t much more than Panda Express.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Another LA-area three-mile drive brought me to the Best Western Pine Tree Motel in nearby Chino. For a fairly modest price, I got a coffee pot, a refrigerator, a very nice breakfast in the morning, and a lovely setting with lots of palm (not pine) trees around.

Only in Montclair: In nearby Ontario CA, Logan’s Candies exhibits the World’s Largest Handmade Candy Cane. It’s six feet long and weighs 30 pounds. If that’s too large for you, there are plenty of smaller, warm, freshly made canes for sale in the shop.

Next Stop: Electric Dusk Drive-In, Los Angeles CA.

Feb. 8: Vineland Drive-In, City of Industry CA

Vineland Drive-In marquee and main screen

photo by jericl cat, from the Carload Flickr pool

It’s Day 39 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I stayed in the Los Angeles area, driving just a few minutes northeast till I reached the Vineland Drive-In in City of Industry CA.

The Vineland opened in 1955 and has stayed active ever since. It switched to digital projection in 2013.

Good news: The Vineland was open on a February Wednesday, and had four screens to choose from. Bad news: I had already seen all four early movies. Good news: One of them was Hidden Figures, an Oscar-nominated film that I hadn’t seen for over three weeks. Of all the movies to watch a second time, that would be my choice.

Miles Today / Total:  17 / 4859 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: Hidden Figures / 29

Nearby Restaurant: It’s about three miles away, but I had to experience a perfect example of roadside Americana at The Donut Hole in La Puente. It’s open from early morning to late, late night, and the donuts are great, but the important thing is to be able to say that you drove through two donut holes to order and pick up your donuts.

Where I Virtually Stayed: Less than three miles away on Puente Avenue was the Courtyard Los Angeles Baldwin Park, which was of course in Baldwin Park. There was a microwave and mini fridge in my room, so I could save drive-in leftovers for breakfast with the coffee I brewed.

Only in City of Industry: According to Wikipedia, City of Industry is a narrow, mostly east to west suburb that hosts over 2,500 businesses but only 219 people. It was incorporated in 1957 to prevent surrounding cities from annexing industrial land for tax revenue. Its few residences either existed before incorporation, or are on properties near Industry Hills Golf Club, Industry Hills Recreation Center, or City Hall. There are also a few people who live at the city-owned nursing home.

Next Stop: Mission Tiki Drive-in Theatre, Montclair CA.

A Contemporary Glimpse of The First Drive-In

Line drawing of the first drive-in theater

from the September 1933 issue of Popular Mechanics via Google Books

Here’s something fun that I ran into today, and I wanted to share it with you. In its September 1933 issue, Popular Mechanics ran a superb illustration of the very first drive-in theater, in Camden NJ. It had opened in June 1933, and its marquee simply read “Drive-In Theatre”.

I found this on Google Books, which includes a treasure trove of searchable issues of Popular Mechanics, Life, Billboard, and even some magazines that never mention drive-ins. I’ve read a lot of drive-in books, but I don’t recall ever seeing this wonderful, crisp drawing before. I presume that the copyright for this issue wasn’t renewed in 1961 and that it then slipped into the public domain. If I’m wrong, please correct me gently.

The headline above the illustration read Drive-In Movie Holds Four Hundred Cars. Here’s the one (long) paragraph that accompanied it:

“Motorists can sit in comfort in their own cars and enjoy the movies at a drive-in theater in Camden, N. J. This outdoor talking-picture theater accommodates 400 cars so that about 1,600 persons can view a performance without leaving their automobiles. This is made possible by seven rows of grades inclined so that vision from the rear car is not impaired by those in front. The cars are parked at the front of each row on a five-per-cent grade. Each aisle is fifty feet deep, giving ample room for cars to enter and leave, and the theater is entirely surrounded by trees. The motor-movie fans, even though seated in the last row, 500 feet from the screen, have no difficulty in seeing or hearing. The screen is sixty feet wide and a new method of controlled directional sound carries the words or music to each car with equal, modulated volume. The outdoor theater is expected to appeal particularly to those who do not like to drive through downtown districts to attend a movie.”

In his authoritative Drive-In Theaters, Kerry Segrave disputes those numbers, writing that the ground plan shows six rows for 336 cars, and that the screen was only 40 feet wide. The theater was sold within three years “to a man who ‘moved’ it to Union NJ.” Still, it’s fun to see such a clear picture of the start of something big.