Aug. 27: Stardust Drive-In Theatre, Sharon ON

It’s Day 239 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, and my 14th in Ontario. Swinging around Lake Simcoe, it took just over an hour to drive from the township of Oro-Medonte to the Stardust Drive-In Theatre in the former village of Sharon just north of the town of Newmarket. Sharon is now part of the municipality of the Town of East Gwillimbury. Few things make me feel more out of place then trying to figure out the cities and stuff up here.

The Stardust began its life in 1955 as the North York Drive In Theatre. According to a 2000 Toronto Star article captured here (PDF), “the theatre isn’t even close to North York any more. Political boundaries moved, but the theatre didn’t.” (I tell you, this system of shifting townships and stuff is making me crazy. But I digress.)

That Star article said that Clifford Murrell’s dad built the North York when Clifford was 18. (The Motion Picture Almanac lists the owner back then as C.E. Murrell.) They had added two more screens in the 1980s and were considering adding a fourth.

Clifford was 71 years old in 2013 when the North York announced via Facebook that it wouldn’t be opening that season. “Unfortunately due to development and changes to digital film we are unable to continue the tradition this year,” the post said. I wrote about that sad story at the time.

I didn’t notice that a month or two later, in swooped Premier Theatres, who bought the place, upgraded the projection system, and renamed it the Stardust Drive-In Newmarket. Chris Bilinski told YorkRegion.com his company leased the property, and wouldn’t be investing as much as for the properties it owns. “Are you going to put chandeliers up in a house you rent?” he said. “It will be a better looking drive-in than what it was, but we don’t own the property, so we can’t invest crazily.”

And that’s where we are now. YorkRegion.com ran another article on the Stardust earlier this month, describing the experience through the eyes of a young father having to sit through my pick for worst film of the year. “Finally, the utterly forgettable Emoji movie came on, the script of which must have been dreamed up in some ad manager’s office. But even though the movie was bad, we were still outside under the stars with a full moon hovering behind our screen.”

The YouTube video of the day is an interesting fisheye lens view of the Stardust. The twilight shots of the screen are especially colorful.

Miles Today / Total: 38 / 28010 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Hitman’s Bodyguard / 153

Nearby Restaurant: Always on the lookout for unusual cuisine, I was happy to stumble onto The Goulash House. They put a Hungarian spin on their menu, but I recognized the “cooked smoked pork hock” on the menu for the Schweinshaxe that it was. So nice to find one of my favorite dishes, no matter what they call it.

Where I Virtually Stayed: The closest hotels are in Newmarket, and I chose the Best Western Voyageur Place Hotel, across the street from the Upper Canada Mall. My queen bed room had a mini-fridge and wifi, my two essentials. There’s a restaurant on site, which makes it easier to pay for breakfast, but the place is literally surrounded on four sides by Tim Hortons, and I’m glad to have an excuse to get coffee and a donut there.

Only in Sharon: The Sharon Temple is an open-air museum of eight distinctive heritage buildings and dwellings. According to Wikipedia, it was constructed between 1825 and 1832 by the “Children of Peace”, a sect led by former Quaker David Willson on whose property it was built. The Sharon Temple Museum Society says the group was “instrumental in the fight for true democracy in Canada.”

Next stop: Lindsay Twin Drive-In Theatre, Lindsay ON.

Aug. 26: Sunset Barrie Drive-In, Oro-Medonte ON

Black and white aerial photo of the three screens and viewing areas

Photo from the Sunset Barrie Facebook page

It’s Day 238 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, and my 13th in Ontario. From Gravenhurst to the Sunset Barrie Drive-In Theatre in Oro-Medonte, the drive was about 45 minutes.

The Sunset Barrie used to be the Barrie Triple, but that drive-in’s origins are hidden in the kind of historical records that you can’t reach over the internet. One complication is the fact that the drive-in is older than Oro-Medonte, which was formed when Oro and Medonte merged in 1994. That township is just outside the fairly populous city of Barrie.

Barrie had a drive-in by 1953, the Huronia, according to that year’s Motion Picture Almanac. Based on the almanac’s ownership listings, the drive-in probably changed hands at least once by the end of the 1960s.

In 1971, Robert Stinson formed Stinson Theatres, starting with a “two-screen drive-in theatre in Barrie“. By that time, the almanacs had ceased listing the Huronia in lieu of the Barrie Drive-In. Since the two drive-ins had the same capacity, my guess is that Stinson rebranded the Huronia when he acquired it.

The Orillia Packet checked in with the Barrie Triple in 2008, not long after the founding Stinson had passed away. At that point, the drive-in was run by Robert’s sons, Henry and Tim. Henry said, “There is a loose plan for a fourth screen at the Barrie location, but first the playground is going to be updated.”

That fourth screen never went up. In 2011, Stinson Theatres sold the drive-in to Premier Operating Corporation, who renamed it the Sunset Barrie. “We’re actually more retro than most places,” Premier comptroller Chris Bilinski told the Studio Scoop. “We start with O Canada before the movie starts and we play old cartoons like Woody Woodpecker.”

Miles Today / Total: 43 / 27972 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Hitman’s Bodyguard / 152

Nearby Restaurant: You’d never guess the speciality of the Grilled Cheese Social Eatery. Or maybe you would. It wasn’t my first grilled cheese restaurant of the year, but it was definitely worth the visit. I ordered The King, with peanut butter, banana, cream cheese, honey, and jam. Thank you very much.

Where I Virtually Stayed: After exceeding my lodging budget the night before, I was happy to find one of the better Super 8 locations in Barrie. The hotel had an indoor pool. My room came with the full set of modern amenities. There was even a hot breakfast with omelettes, better than a lot of Super 8s. All at a price that helped my budget catch up with me.

Only in Oro-Medonte: In next-door Barrie, they filmed the final challenge for the 2007 season of the long-running reality show Canada’s Worst Driver. Jason Zhang “won” the honor for his dangerous performance, stopping in the middle of a highway. As a result, he surrendered his driving license and gave up driving permanently.

Next stop: Stardust Drive-In Theatre, Sharon ON.

Aug. 25: Muskoka Drive-In, Gravenhurst ON

Muskoka Drive-In screen on a rock with playground equipment in front

Flickr photo by Cory Doctorow, author of
Pirate Cinema and several other fine novels

It’s Day 237 of my virtual Drive-In-a-Day Odyssey, and my 12th in Ontario. It took just a bit over an hour to drive from Midland to the Muskoka Drive-In, about a mile northeast of Gravenhurst ON. It’s hard to tell distances with all those kilometers they use up here.

The Muskoka is yet another drive-in with its origins well separated from anything on the internet. Several online sources say that it opened in 1952, and at least one says it operated continuously ever since. My almanacs verify that it was there in 1953, although they lose track of it in the 1970s. That doesn’t prove anything; I know of other uncounted drive-ins, though it’s unusual for those folks to lose one if it didn’t actually close.

What makes this place probably unique is that the screen is made of cement and is built on top of a giant granite boulder. The drive-in’s slogan is “Meet You at the rock!” They claim that some of the playground equipment in front of the screen is also original, and the surrounding forest on three sides helps keep the ambient light down.

From the internet’s perspective, the Muskoka sprang into being with William Alexander. According to the Huntsville Forester, Alexander acquired the place in 2008. “Unlike (other theatres), this drive-in really has a heart and a soul,” he said. “When you go there, with the grassy ramps, with the trees surrounding it, and that screen on the giant rock, it’s got character. And it’s unlike any other drive-in that I’ve ever experienced.”

In 2014, Alexander launched an online fundraiser on Fundrazr.com. He spoke with City TV’s Breakfast Television while he was working as a grip on the dog-saves-Christmas movie Shelby, starring Chevy Chase and Tom Arnold. “We’re marching forward very proudly because the drive-in for many years was allowed to run down, and we’ve taken over the last five years, we’ve been building it back up again,” he said. “Last year, we have a phenomenal year, but it just wasn’t enough to get us over the hump because there were so many slow years in rebuilding the brand of the drive-in.” That fundraiser fell short, but Alexander had told CTV News Barrie that he needed to buy a digital projector regardless of the outcome. “So it’s either you upgrade or fall by the wayside.”

Taking advantage of the capabilities of that new equipment, Alexander is still running the show. In June 2017, he helped a patron pop the question with a special video before the movie. She said yes.

There’s a decent YouTube video of the Muskoka from 2012, but it’s really more of an ad for Ford, so I put it down here.

I love the setting at the Muskoka, but I can’t say as much for this night’s movie. My second viewing of The Nut Job 2 was at least one too many.

Miles Today / Total: 56 / 27929 (rounded to the nearest mile)

Movie Showing / Total Active Nights: The Nut Job 2 / 151

Nearby Restaurant: First there’s the Sawdust City Brewery, with an amazing raspberry radler. In its parking lot, if you’re as lucky as me, is the Grillicious Gourmet Food Truck. A great burger and hand-cut fries sound pedestrian, but out of the food truck, they tasted marvelous. Or maybe that was the beer talking.

Where I Virtually Stayed: It’s a bit touristy and not at all inexpensive, but the Residence Inn Gravenhurst Muskoka Wharf is very, very nice. Each room has a full kitchen, rewarding someone who stays for a week more than just one night. Breakfast has everything anyone would need. And most noteworthy are the views of Muskoka Bay. I really wish I could stay longer.

Only in Gravenhurst: The inappropriately sized furniture week continues. The world’s largest Muskoka chair is another feature of the Sawdust City Brewery parking lot, as captured by photos on Roadside America. The chair is 21 feet high by 16 feet wide and painted bright yellow. It was built in 2010 to replace one destroyed by a tornado.

Next stop: Sunset Barrie Drive-In Theatre, Oro-Medonte ON.