Sept. 6: Cine-parc Boucherville, Boucherville QC

It’s Day 249 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. I circled Montreal from the northwest to the northeast, from the Drive-in Saint-Eustache, in Saint-Eustache of course, to the Cine-parc Boucherville in Boucherville QC of course. The drive only took about 40 minutes.

The Ciné-Parc Boucherville was the first drive-in to open in Quebec in July 1970, but that wasn’t this Cine-parc Boucherville. Thank goodness for Mike Rivest’s Montreal Cinema History page and his note on a Cinema Treasures page, because this is very confusing. The old one, which closed in 1985, was just west of the Boulevard de Montarville at Route 20’s exit 95. The new one is just east of the Boulevard de Montarville at Route 20’s exit 95.

The current Boucherville opened as the Ciné-Parc Odeon, owned by Odeon Theatres, in 1974 with the same two screens it has now. It changed its name to Boucherville in 2006. This drive-in is still huge, with a capacity of about 2000 cars, and it’s still surrounded by acres of farmland.

From everything I read, what I can make out of it, the Boucherville is doing great. Daniel Séguin, general manager of Cineplex, which owns the drive-in, told Radio Canada in 2015, “Le goût d’aller au ciné-parc est souvent lié à la première visite quand on est jeune. On y est allé avec ses parents, et plus tard, on veut le faire découvrir à ses propres enfants.” Google Translate says that means something like, “The taste of going to the movie theater is often linked to the first visit when you are young. We went there with his parents, and later we want to make him discover his own children. ”

The YouTube video of the day show a fun-looking festival hosted by the Duval Scion car dealership in early 2011. There are just enough glimpses of the drive-in to make it worthwhile to embed here.

The Cine-parc Boucherville showed its final movies of the season last Saturday. This is the first time I’ve run into three dark days in a row since late May. I guess summer really is over.

Miles Today / Total: 32 / 28663 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 160

Nearby Restaurant: For one evening, I wanted to just stick around close to my hotel, but I found a real winner close by, Le Tire-Bouchon. I didn’t tell them that I thought the name sounded a lot like Tirebiter, and the food was much better than steel-belted rubber. The appetizer, entree and dessert were all one package price, so the columns I picked were green salad, duck magret, and Cru du Clocher cheese with walnut bread. Yum!

Where I Virtually Stayed: The Comfort Inn in Boucherville is a lot like most Comfort Inns in the states, and that’s a good thing. My room had the full set of modern amenities, and the hot breakfast in the morning was another Comfort standard. Just another solid place to stop for the night.

Only in Boucherville: This city is home to the Brasserie New Deal Brewing Co., a microbrewery that’s also a benefit corporation. That’s one of the three reasons I was happy to visit. The other two are fresh beer (of course) and the coincidence that it sits on the site of the original Ciné-Parc Boucherville.

Next stop: Cine-Parc Mont St-Hilaire, Mont-Saint-Hilaire QC.

Sept. 5: Drive-in Saint-Eustache, Saint-Eustache QC

It’s Day 248 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. My sojourn in Quebec continued. I drove an hour and a half east from the Templeton Drive-In Theatre in Gatineau to the Drive-in Saint-Eustache, in Saint-Eustache.

The Ciné-Parc Saint-Eustache opened in November 1971, less than two years after the province lifted its ban(!) on drive-ins. At the time, it was bilingual, with one screen showing movies in French and the other in English. In less than a year, it added a third screen, and in 1978 it added two more. The sprawling complex in this Montreal suburb is Canada’s largest drive-in and reportedly the largest outside the United States.

Like some large, flat, concrete-covered drive-ins in the US, during the day the ciné-parc also hosts a “marché aux puces,” literally a market of fleas. That market saw something I hadn’t heard of before – a fatal two-car accident in a drive-in parking lot, which happened in November 2008 according to Zone911.com. Then again, someone else spotted a UFO there a couple of years later, so maybe it’s just one of those places where normal physics don’t always apply.

The Saint-Eustache made the transfer to digital in 2012. Brigitte Mathers, president of the Mathers Group, which owns the drive-in, told L’Écho de la Rive-Nord, “Il y en a quelques-uns qui décident de ne pas investir. On parle d’environ 100 000 $ par écran.” Or as Google Translate put it, “There are a few owners who will decide not to invest. We’re talking about $100,000 per screen.”

By all reports, those investments are paying off as movie-goers are rediscovering the benefits of a drive-in in Quebec as they are elsewhere.

The Vimeo video of the day spends most of its time talking with folks waiting for the movie, but the first minute provides a nice glimpse into what this place looks like.

These days, almost all the movies they show here are in French, but dark screens are the same in any language. At this time of year, the Saint-Eustache is only open on Friday and Saturday nights.

Miles Today / Total: 93 / 28631 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 160

Nearby Restaurant: With all this Frenchness around, I wanted to duck in to a little bubble of America, so I had dinner at the Texas Star, which happens to be owned by the same company that owns the drive-in. A rib eye steak and salad hit the spot, and the margaritas helped me feel even more at home.

Where I Virtually Stayed: One of the closest hotels to the ciné-parc is the L’Oasis de l’Ile, an amazing little hideaway on a private island in the Rivière des Mille Îles (River of a Thousand Islands), a channel of the Ottawa River. I relaxed in the outdoor pools in the afternoon and enjoyed a continental breakfast in the morning. It was just amazing that this was a short drive away.

Only in Saint-Eustache: Just over the river in western Montreal, the Gibeau Orange Julep restaurant is a 40-foot diameter orange. Wikipedia says Hermas Gibeau built a slightly smaller orange concrete sphere in 1945 where he sold Gibeau Orange Julep, a drink similar to Orange Julius. The restaurant and its orange sphere were rebuilt larger and further back from the roadway when it was widened as the Décarie Expressway in 1966.

Next stop: Cine-parc Boucherville, Boucherville QC.

Sept. 4: Templeton Drive-In Theatre, Gatineau QC

It’s Day 247 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey. After three weeks in Ontario, I drove down from the Skylight Drive-In of Pembroke, through Ottawa and just across the Ottawa River to the Templeton Drive-In Theatre in Gatineau QC. It took about two hours to get here.

I approach the drive-ins (or ciné-parcs) of Quebec with great trepidation. Most of the information about them is in French, and for some reason the province didn’t have any until 1970. I do have Google Translate, so that’s something.

The Templeton’s story is unusually basic. It’s been open since 1974, yet it’s had only one owner, Paul Touchet. It’s the only drive-in in North America, or probably anywhere, that shows movies in French and English, one screen each. For a hint of what the owner is like, I highly recommend the lengthy, English-language 2009 interview with Touchet hosted on KeyRecords.com.

There were storm clouds a few years ago when the City of Gatineau was considering purchasing or just plain snatching the Templeton’s land to expand the city’s industrial park. According to Toronto Metro News, the city put a two-year hold on the land in 2007, advising the owner not to make improvements while the city decided what it would do. It renewed that hold in 2009 with a deadline of 2011. Fortunately, the city council voted in November that year to leave the drive-in alone.

The Templeton converted to digital projection in 2013. According to CHIP FM, all five Quebec ciné-parc owners agreed to switch at the same time to get a better deal from the equipment supplier.

The YouTube video of the day is the drive-in’s commercial, which is in French but shows what the place looks like. For another nice French video, the CBC‘s report from 2013 left me wishing I could embed it here.

Darn it, I just missed the last movie of the season the night before. The Templeton’s web site says it’ll be back in the spring (or printemps) of 2018.

Miles Today / Total: 109 / 28538 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: dark / 160

Nearby Restaurant: For a great burger, I ate the Foubrac burger at Le Foubrac. It’s a burger topped with cream cheese, bacon, lettuce, tomatoes, caramelized onions and mushrooms. There’s also enough beer to keep the meal balanced.

Where I Virtually Stayed: I stayed at the Ramada Plaza just across the street from the Casino du Lac-Leamy, which was a decent place to spend the evening without a movie. My room had the full set of modern amenities, plus one of the bathtubs with therapeutic water jets and an electric fireplace. Breakfast isn’t included, but a Tim Hortons is so close by that I hardly noticed.

Only in Gatineau: Gatineau is home to the Canadian Museum of History, a huge place that includes so very much Canadian history. The hockey exhibit included a can of Rocket Richard tomato soup and a prototype of a tabletop hockey game.

Next stop: Drive-in Saint-Eustache, Saint-Eustache QC.