When "How the West Was Won" galloped into town on March 14, 1963, the epic film hitched its wagon at the Cooper Theatre in St. Louis Park and didn't leave these parts for a stunning 88 weeks -- its longest run at any U.S. theater outside Hollywood.
People came from all over and paid the equivalent of up to $18 (in today's dollars) for the cinematic spectacle, often ordering tickets in advance to ensure a seat. "How the West Was Won" was one of only two feature films shot in Cinerama, and the 105-foot-wide screen of the Cooper -- the "Northwest Home of Cinerama" -- was the only place to see it.
"It was one of the few films I went to where the audience applauded when the drapes in front of the screen started to open all the way," said Joel Thom, 63, who was in his late teens when he saw the film at the Cooper. "And they kept opening and opening and opening, and then -- bam! -- 'How the West Was Won.'"
Added Thom, who became manager of the Cooper in the 1970s, "It was thrilling, just absolutely tingling, to have that experience because you really felt like you were at something very special."
A new DVD, out today after a six-year restoration, aims to re-create some of that magic for the first time on home video.
Until now, the greatest asset of "How the West Was Won" in theaters -- its Cinerama presentation -- was its biggest liability for home viewers. Cinerama films were shot using three synchronized side-by-side cameras to create three strips of film, a cumbersome process. In specially equipped Cinerama theaters such as the Cooper, the three films were projected in sync to create one giant image.
The Cooper's huge screen, which was curved 146 degrees, and the movie's seven-channel sound combined to create an unparalleled experience.
But the three-strip Cinerama process proved problematic when the film was shown in regular movie theaters, on TV and on home video. In widescreen presentations, the three panels created two distracting vertical lines in the composite picture, which was cropped on the sides. The panel join lines were visible in pan-and-scan presentations, too. Worse, the color was off in each panel, so the overall image quality wasn't uniform.