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  1. Art Theatre Guild. The Art Theatre Guild ( ATG) was a Japanese film production and distribution company which started in 1961, releasing mostly Japanese New Wave and art films. [1] [2] From the late 1960s to the mid 1980s, it also often acted as producer. [1] [2] In 2018, ATG merged with its parent company Toho. [3] [4] [5]

  2. www.cutheaterhistory.com › art-theatre-guildArt Theatre Guild | Mysite

    An enterprising businessman from Ohio, Louis K. Sher, was buying single-screen theaters, like the Park, and transforming them into what would become known as art-house cinemas. Sher, who called his company the Art Theatre Guild, bought his first theater in Columbus, Ohio in 1954 and began showing foreign films, mainly from Europe but also Japan.

  3. Apr 8, 2013 · Art Theatre Guild, an Introduction. The pioneering independent production and distribution company Art Theatre Guild, or ATG, was a driving and centrifugal force that inspired and intertwined the most significant avant-garde currents transforming Japanese cinema of the Sixties and Seventies. Founded in 1961 as a distributor principally of ...

  4. In 1954, the Bexley Theatre became part of the Art Theater Guild chain. By the 1960’s, the split-projector system had long been abandoned, and the two screens always showed separate films. But bookings were often shared with the chain’s other Columbus house, the World Theater on North High Street next to Ohio State University.

  5. Art Theatre Guild. The Art Theatre Guild, was an independent film company that radically transformed Japanese cinema by producing and distributing experimental, transgressive, and….

  6. Short film made at the same time as Funeral Parade of Roses using much of the same footage. 1969. Funeral Parade of Roses. Bara No Soretsu. 薔薇の葬列. Toshio Matsumoto. 1970. Apart from Life. Chi No Mure.

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  8. Jan 26, 2024 · In 1969, a few years after Vance died, The Guild made headlines when The Cincinnati Vice Control squad raided the theater and seized Russ Meyer’s Vixen. The Guild obstinately ran it again the next day. The Vice Control squad seized that second print. The film was subsequently ruled obscene and banned in the city by Judge Simon Leis, Sr.

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