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Wallis Cinemas


Wallis Cinemas is a South Australian company that operates cinema complexes, cinemas and drive-ins in the city of Adelaide and its suburbs.

This family-owned company was established as "Wallis Theatres" by its founder, Hugh Wallis, in 1956 with the opening of the Blueline drive-in theatre at West Beach in South Australia. The Blueline was the state's first drive-in theatre. Wallis Theatres expanded rapidly, opening drive-in theatres throughout South Australia over the next decade. The company operated the following drive-in theatres in Adelaide:

Wallis Theatres also catered for country South Australia, with drive-in theatres established in the Riverland, Barossa Valley and mid-north. Wallis' six country drive-ins were:

The company opened South Australia's first multi-screen cinema in 1971 when the single-screen Glenelg Ozone was purchased and transformed into what is now the Glenelg Cinema Centre. In 1972, Wallis Theatres saved the Chelsea Cinema at Marryatville from demolition. This cinema is now heritage-listed. The company's growth continued when Wallis Theatres purchased a warehouse in Hindmarsh Square, Adelaide, and converted it into a twin cinema. A further three screens were built in 1980, and the complex was named Academy Cinema City.

Wallis Theatres purchased the single-screen Forum Cinema at North Adelaide in 1983. This location was redeveloped into the Piccadilly Cinemas, although the company sought to maintain the heritage and architecture of the building. The company built and opened the five-screen Noarlunga Cinema Centre in 1991, the Mount Barker Cinemas in 2003, and the Mitcham Cinemas in 2007.

Wallis Theatres had closed and sold most of their country and suburban drive-ins by the early 1990s. Of their remaining drive-in locations, the Blueline closed in 1998 and the Valleyline in 2003. However, Wallis continues to operate the Mainline drive-in.

The company closed their single-screen Oxford Cinema at Unley in 2001. In 2007, faced with dwindling audience numbers, Wallis Theatres also closed down their five-screen Academy Cinema City complex, which has since been demolished. Competition from the Greater Union cinema complex (later rebranded as an "Event" cinema) at Marion resulted in falling numbers of patrons to the Glenelg Cinema Centre, which was closed in February 2009 and the building demolished in 2011.


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