Hudson Valley Attractions | ||
Greene CountyMovies | Movie Theaters | Cinema |
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.Closed Caption for Greene Movies | Movie Theaters | Cinema |
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Captionfish in Greene County | ||
Captionfish is a captioned movies search engine that finds Open Captioned and Rear Window® captioned movies showing in theaters across the United States.
To find closed caption movies in Greene County press blue button and enter your location into "Your Instant CC Film Finder". website and more . . . |
All Catskill Listings
Catskill Movies | Movie Theaters | Cinema |
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Community Theatre - Catskill | 518-943-2410 | |
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All Coxsackie Listings
Coxsackie Movies | Movie Theaters | Cinema |
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Hi-Way Drive-In Theatre | 518-731-8672 | |
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All Greene County Listings
Greene County Movies | Movie Theaters | Cinema |
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Fandango - Movies, Times & Tickets | ||
Moviefone - Movies, Times & Tickets |
All Hunter Listings
Hunter Movies | Movie Theaters | Cinema |
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Mountain Cinema | 518-263-4702 | |
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All Windham Listings
Windham Movies | Movie Theaters | Cinema |
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Windham Theatre | 518-734-6110 | |
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More Hudson Valley Movies | Movie Theaters | Cinema |
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Albany County [10 listings over 6 locations]
Columbia County [7 listings over 4 locations]
Dutchess County [12 listings over 9 locations]
Orange County [10 listings over 7 locations]
Putnam County [6 listings over 5 locations]
Rensselaer County [6 listings over 5 locations]
Rockland County [8 listings over 6 locations]
Saratoga County [3 listings over 2 locations]
Schenectady County [5 listings over 2 locations]
Ulster County [7 listings over 6 locations]
Westchester County [23 listings over 19 locations]
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What's playing at the movies in Greene County? See a list of movie theaters in Greene, NY. Find movie theaters by location and address and the movies playing at each theater. Also, find captioned movies for theaters in Greene, NY or nearby areas. Are you planning to take the kids to a movie this weekend? Kids love to go to the movies. Find a good movie for children and the whole family. Find an appropriate movie for kids by checking the MPAA rating for a movie. Are you going to a movie? Find out what is playing this weekend in Greene NY. Find a comedy, drama, animation, action, adventure, foreign film, art film, romantic love story, and more. Check runtime and showings for currently playing Find what movies are coming to your local theater. Find release dates, MPAA ratings, movie details, showtimes & tickets, previews, trailers, and film clips, cast, movie photos, and more. Also read critics reviews and user reviews at
Movie theaters in Coxsackie, NY Movie theaters in Hunter, NY Movie theaters in Windham, NY
The following is available at
www.Filmsite.org - created and written by Tim Dirks.
Introduction to Filmsite
Greatest Films Lists - The Best
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Explore and Enjoy your Favorite Movie Classification
The Most Controversial Films of All-Time Time Magazine's All-Time 100 Best Movies Los Angeles Daily News Readers' Poll: Greatest American Films Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences - Best Picture Winners Sight & Sound Magazine's 10 Best Films Polls TV Guide's 50 Greatest Movies (on TV and Video) Guinness Book of Films Top 100 Films (by Genre Category) Mr. Showbiz's 100 Best Movies of All Time - Readers and Critics Picks Movieline Magazine's 100 Best Movies Ever Made Movieline Magazine's 100 Greatest Foreign Films Premiere Magazine's 100 Most Daring Movies Ever Made Empire Magazine's 50 Greatest Independent Films Rolling Stone's 100 Maverick Movies of the Last 100 Years FilmFour's 100 Greatest Films of All Time British Film Institute's 100 Favorite British Films of the 20th Century Village Voice's 100 Best Films of the 20th Century Empire Magazine's 50 Best Films Empire Magazine's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time Entertainment Weekly's 100 Greatest Movies of All Time Leonard Maltin's 100 Must-See Films of the 20th Century Maxim Magazine's 100 Greatest Guy Movies Ever Made Men's Journal's 50 Best Guy Movies of All Time 100 Memorable and Great 'Chick' Flicks 50 Greatest Chick Flicks by O Magazine 100 Recommended Children's Movies BFI's Top 10 (and Top 50) Greatest Children's Films Vanity Fair's 50 Greatest Films of All-Time Arts and Faith's Top 100 Spiritually-Significant Films The Film 100 - 100 Most Influential People (and Their Films) National Film Registry Titles San Francisco Chronicle's Vintage Video: Hot 100 From Out of the Past Time Out's Centenary Top Hundred Films Time Out's Readers Top Hundred Films Video Detective's Top 100 Films Internet Movie DataBase's Top 100 Films All-Time Box-Office Top 100 (unadjusted and adjusted for inflation) Box-Office Top 10 (by decade) Entertainment Weekly's 100 Best Film Soundtracks Film Comment's 101 Film Score Milestones Most Oscar Wins by Film Most Oscar Nominations by Film Most Acting Nominations by Film Best Picture Winners 20th Century Best Picture Winners Best Director Winners Best Actor Winners Best Supporting Actor Winners Best Actress Winners (1927/28 - present) Best Supporting Actress Winners Best Screenplay/Writer Winners 101 Greatest Film Screenplays of All-Time Visit Tim Dirks in-depth exploration History of Cinema, Current Movies, and the Future of Film. Captionfish displays Captioning for Movies and TrailersClosed Captioning (CC) and subtitling are both processes of displaying text on a television, video screen, or other visual display to provide additional or interpretive information. Captioning provides transcription of the audio portion of a film as the audio is spoken. Caption also provides information regarding music being played, non-verbal sounds, and other non-verbal audio.Captioning can be open or closed. Closed caption indicates that the captions are optional and only available when the viewer selects the option to view captions.
About Captioning for Movies"Until the passage of the Television Decoder Circuitry Act of 1990, television captioning was performed by a set-top box manufactured by Sanyo Electric and marketed by The National Captioning Institute (NCI). Through discussions with the manufacturer it was established that the appropriate circuitry integrated into the television set would be less expensive than the stand-alone box, and Ronald May, then a Sanyo employee, provided the expert witness testimony on behalf of Sanyo and Gallaudet University in support of the passage of the bill. On January 23, 1991, the Television Decoder Circuitry Act of 1990 was passed by US Congress. This Act gave the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) power to enact rules on the implementation of Closed Captioning. This Act required all analog television receivers with screens of at least 13 inches or greater, either sold or manufactured, to have the ability to display closed captioning by July 1, 1993."Also in 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was passed to ensure equal opportunity for persons with disabilities. The ADA prohibits discrimination against persons with disabilities in public accommodations or commercial facilities. Title III of the ADA requires that public facilities, such as hospitals, bars, shopping centers and museums (but not movie theaters), provide access to verbal information on televisions, films or slide shows. "The Telecommunications Act of 1996 expanded on the Decoder Circuitry Act to place the same requirements on digital television receivers by July 1, 2002. All TV programming distributors in the U.S. are required to provide closed caption for Spanish language video programming as of January 1, 2010. "A bill, H.R. 3101, the Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010, was passed by the United States House of Representatives in July 2010. A similar bill, S. 3304, with the same name was passed by the United States Senate on August 5, 2010, by the House of Representatives on September 28, 2010, and was signed by President Barack Obama on October 8, 2010. The Act requires, in part, for ATSC-decoding set-top box remotes to have a button to turn on or off the closed captioning in the output signal. It also requires broadcasters to provide captioning for television programs redistributed on the Internet. "On February 20, 2014, the FCC unanimously approved the implementation of quality standards for closed captioning, addressing accuracy, timing, completeness, and placement. This is the first time the FCC has addressed quality issues in captions." Sourced: Wikipedia. |