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‘HappyLand’: Alamo Drafthouse Naples Announces Mini Golf Course Featuring Iconic Hollywood Creatures

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Mini golf is headed to the upcoming Alamo Drafthouse Naples, we’ve learned this afternoon. HappyLand Movie Miniature Golf will be located in the lobby of the cinema company’s latest location and will combine a bar and lounge with a nine-hole mini golf course for all-in-one fun.

The course’s nine holes are inspired by some of our favorite films, with each one featuring a different Hollywood creature incorporated into the putting challenge. Guests can expect to start tap-tap-tapping it in at HappyLand when Alamo Drafthouse Naples opens later this spring.

One of those holes, as seen above, will be JAWS-THEMED!

“Naples is a golfer’s paradise, so we knew we had to do something special there for our first Florida location,” says Alamo Drafthouse CEO Michael Kustermann. “HappyLand will be a unique venue for our guests to relax, enjoy a few drinks, and hit golf balls into an alligator’s mouth – we couldn’t be more excited about it!”

In addition to the world-class mini golf course, HappyLand will feature a full bar with 24 beers on tap and a golf-themed signature cocktail list, including an alcohol-free option called the Victory Lap. Riptide Brewing Co., a local Naples brewery, is also offering their Olde Naples Blonde Ale under a private label named Chubbs’ 19th Hole Blonde Ale.

Inspired by the iconic character from Happy Gilmore portrayed by Carl Weathers, a custom tap handle in the shape of Chubbs’ wooden hand is being developed in honor of the late actor. The lounge and mini golf course will also be available to rent for events, parties, and screenings, with multiple HD TVs and room for 50 people. HappyLand opens 30 minutes before the first movie each day and closes just after the start of the final show of the evening. Guests can easily start a round by purchasing a token from the concierge and redeeming it at a golf ball vending machine. Tokens cost $7 for adults, $5 for kids (15 and under), and every $20 spent at the HappyLand bar earns guests a FREE token. Play is open to all guests age 3 and up.

In celebration of its first Florida location, Alamo Drafthouse will also be giving away a free year-long, two-person subscription to Alamo Season Pass – its monthly subscription service which entitles subscribers to one free movie per day – and a year of free mini golf. Sweepstakes rules and entry can be found HERE, while more information on Alamo Season Pass can be found HERE.

And while only one lucky guest will win a free year of movies and mini golf, any Naples film fan that joins Season Pass will get their second month free. That’s two months of movies for the price of one. This offer will only be available to Alamo Drafthouse Naples guests for a limited time after the grand opening.

The new Alamo Drafthouse Naples will be located in a 33,652-square-foot space in Mercato, a high-end, mixed-use retail center. It will feature 11 auditoriums updated with approximately 650 newly-installed luxury recliner seats and 4k digital projection. Parking is free and easily accessible at a parking deck located behind the theater. Like all Alamo Drafthouse cinemas, the new Naples location will offer a scratch-made food menu, local beers on draft, and craft cocktails brought to guests in their seats by stealthy servers trained to not disrupt the movie experience. Speaking of not disrupting the movie, the cinema chain’s famed No Talking/No Texting policy will ensure guests can watch films free from annoying distractions. Guests are encouraged to arrive up to 30 minutes early to screenings for an ad-free preshow with funny clips, informative video essays, and more.

“We were keen on bringing a unique, over-the-top entertainment addition to the already exceptional cinema experience that is Alamo,” said Adam Schwegman, partner and executive vice president of leasing at North American Properties (NAP). “HappyLand will be the cherry on top, making it a true hole-in-one destination for the Naples community.”

Writer in the horror community since 2008. Editor in Chief of Bloody Disgusting. Owns Eli Roth's prop corpse from Piranha 3D. Has four awesome cats. Still plays with toys.

The Further

Salem Horror Fest 2024 Kicks Off With Scream Queen Linnea Quigley and ‘The People’s Joker’ [Event Report]

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From venue changes and the pandemic to political backlash and the threat of litigation, Salem Horror Fest founder and director Kay Lynch has never been one to back down. The festival’s seventh annual event, which kicked off last night at Salem’s Peabody Essex Museum, was further proof of her resilience.

After its original headliner, Hocus Pocus star Kathy Najimy, canceled with less than 48 hours notice, the festival’s entire opening night ceremony was restructured. Tickets, which had sold for $50, were refunded and the program was made free (with the option to make a donation), costing the festival an untold amount of money.

But the show must go on and it did so in spectacular fashion with horror icon Linnea Quigley (The Return of the Living Dead, Night of the Demons) sitting down for a live interview, while the Hocus Pocus screening was replaced by The People’s Joker, previously scheduled to be the festival’s closing film.

Kay Lynch

Following a Joker-inspired drag performance from local favorite Miz. Diamond Wigfall that put smiles on the audience’s faces, Lynch took the stage to make her opening remarks. The festival’s resilient leader was quick to address the elephant in the room. “It’s been hard, but when I look around at everything and everyone here, I think, ‘This is way fucking cooler than it would have been,'” she chuckled as the crowd erupted in cheers.

The Faculty of Horror co-host Alexandra West delivered an impassioned keynote address. Perfectly encapsulating Salem Horror’s ethos, she prudently addressed the real-world horrors currently going on in the world while empowering those in attendance. “Those in power have labeled us weirdos, freaks, sluts, trash, perverts, and a whole lot of other words I refuse to use. What I want to impart to everyone in this room is: be a fucking weirdo.” Her rally cry was met with thunderous applause.

Lynch was joined by Suzanne Desrocher-Romero, George A. Romero’s widow and founder of the George A. Romero Foundation, to present the recipients of this year’s GARF Fellowship, which recognizes “up-and-coming filmmakers who embody that DIY, punk-rock spirit that George had” by connecting them with established filmmaker mentors.

Livescreamers director Michelle Iannantuono and Meltdown: A Nuclear Family’s Ascension into Madness director Colton Van Til will receive mentorship from Jenn Wexler (The Ranger, The Sacrifice Game) and Travis Stevens (Girl on the Third Floor, Jakob’s Wife). Lynch also announced the festivals jury winners: Jasmine J. Johnson’s Inner Demons for Best Short and Rachel Kempf & Nick Toti’s It Doesn’t Get Any Better Than This for Best Feature.

Suzanne Desrocher-Romero

Rue Morgue executive editor and Faculty of Horror co-host Andrea Subissati led a brisk, 20-minute conversation with Quigley, covering her journey as a woman in horror from watching Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers with her parents to working with Dan O’Bannon on Return of the Living Dead and beyond. The scream queen cites The Walking Dead as a turning point for the genre’s mainstream respect.

Via a video intro, The People’s Joker director/co-writer/star Vera Drew reminded viewers that the movie is protected by copyright law while poking fun at the situation. It’s no surprise that rights issues plagued the Batman parody’s festival run, but Altered Innocence has brazenly given it a theatrical release.

I expected the film to be outrageous it’s very funny, especially with an audience but I wasn’t prepared for how profound it is. Beyond the manic energy, self-aware absurdity, endearingly crude effects, and animated interludes is a heartfelt, coming-of-age tale exploring queerness. Its core message of being true to oneself is universal, but its representation is particularly important for the trans youth of today.

The Salem Horror Fest team deserves endless commendation for pivoting on such short notice, as does the community for rallying behind it.

The festival continues April 26-28 and May 3-5 at various venues in Salem.

Andrea Subissati & Linnea Quigley

In addition to the aforementioned award winners, programming highlights include George A. Romero’s Resident Evil, a documentary on the master of horror’s unmade adaptation; Carnage for Christmas, from prolific trans filmmaker Alice Maio Mackay; The Monkey, based on Stephen King’s Skeleton Crew short story; Ghost Game, director Jill Gevargizian’s follow-up to The Stylist; and Faceless After Dark, a meta horror tale starring Terrifier‘s Jenna Kanell.

Other features include Black Lake: Director’s Cut, Ghost Game, I Will Never Leave You Alone, It’s Not Paint, The Judgment, Liminal, My Mother’s Eyes, Purgatory Jack, Sigil, Sins of the Father, Sweet Relief, The Vizitant, Welcome Week: A College Horror Anthology, and Young Blondes, Stalked and Murdered.

Salem Horror has teamed with GARF and Coolidge After Midnite for screenings of Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead, Day of the Dead, and Land of the Deadat the Coolidge Corner Theatre in Brookline. The former two are digital restorations, while the latter two will be shown on 35mm.

The festival will also host several repertory screenings followed by live podcast recordings: Cat People with Faculty of Horror, The Grudge with Horror Queers, Demon Knight with Girl, That’s Scary & Blerdy Massacre, plus a secret screening presented by Cinematic Void.

There will also be short films (including a selection of Stephen King’s Dollar Babies adaptations), author discussions (with the likes of Christopher Golden, Bracken MacLeod, Kayla Cottingham, Cat Scully, J.W. Ocker, and Alyssa Alessi), filmmaker Q&As, after parties, and more.

Get your tickets for Salem Horror Fest 2024 now.

Miz. Diamond Wigfall

Alexandra West

Kay Lynch & Suzanne Desrocher-Romero

Linnea Quigley

K/XI & Kay Lynch

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