Cinema 3 (Pukekohe)
Address:
85 Edinburgh Street Pukekohe 2120 Contact Person: Mihi Tarawa, Operations Manager. Phone: 09 237 0216 Email: [email protected] Website: http://www.pukekohecinemas.co.nz |
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. Nearby cafes.Details
Capacity:
Screen: Three screens. with 3D
Sound: Dolby 5.1
Seating: Comfortable flip-up seats
Snackbar: Liquor licence. Coffee, good range of snacks. Nearby cafes.
Accessibility: Lift to upstairs, good access
Capacity:
Screen: Three screens. with 3D
Sound: Dolby 5.1
Seating: Comfortable flip-up seats
Snackbar: Liquor licence. Coffee, good range of snacks. Nearby cafes.
Accessibility: Lift to upstairs, good access
Geoff's Review
Nearly ten years old, this cinema which opened on Boxing Day 2011, is sited in a well-designed and airy building just one block away from the CBD. Offers a good programme of mainstream and art house titles, with Monday special screenings of art house/niche films.
A cinema which caters to this market gardening/commuter town of Pukekohe and surrounding growth areas to the south-west of Auckland. Pukekohe is expanding (projected to reach 50,000 in the near future) but it retains an attractive small-town feel. The primary audience for Cinema 3 is children (especially during school holidays) and local retirees--who have come to regard the cinema as their local, with numerous regulars on first-name familiarity.
Pukekohe seems to be thriving and the main shopping street does not have the signs of decline which characterise some other medium-sized New Zealand towns. I recommend checking out the Kaos Cafe at 44 Edinburgh Street, which is quite an experience: walls and ceilings lined with vinyl record slip covers and every surface covered with curios. There is also 'Movie Kaos' out back; a small screening room which screen films for patrons, with plans for more 'movie + burger' nights.
Nearly ten years old, this cinema which opened on Boxing Day 2011, is sited in a well-designed and airy building just one block away from the CBD. Offers a good programme of mainstream and art house titles, with Monday special screenings of art house/niche films.
A cinema which caters to this market gardening/commuter town of Pukekohe and surrounding growth areas to the south-west of Auckland. Pukekohe is expanding (projected to reach 50,000 in the near future) but it retains an attractive small-town feel. The primary audience for Cinema 3 is children (especially during school holidays) and local retirees--who have come to regard the cinema as their local, with numerous regulars on first-name familiarity.
Pukekohe seems to be thriving and the main shopping street does not have the signs of decline which characterise some other medium-sized New Zealand towns. I recommend checking out the Kaos Cafe at 44 Edinburgh Street, which is quite an experience: walls and ceilings lined with vinyl record slip covers and every surface covered with curios. There is also 'Movie Kaos' out back; a small screening room which screen films for patrons, with plans for more 'movie + burger' nights.