Here’s the lineup for the drive-in portion of this year’s Film on the Rock, with gates opening at 7:30 p.m. The amphitheater shows cost $16 a person or $32 for VIP seating and will include either music or comedy pre-show. Reds and blues predominate, and there are sculptures hanging from the ceiling. The architecture is more restrained, but the décor is still a bit over the top, for my tastes. The space is utilized well, and the aisles are wide, but not as wide, as those mega-casinos. The $59.50 price of admission per car includes popcorn, soda and two boxes of candy. Red Rock Casino is smaller, and I would call it more intimate. Tickets for Film on the Rocks go on sale April 16 at 10 a.m.
But from July 12 through the end of the season, screenings will return to the amphitheater. The resort has 3,000 slot machines, 62 table games, a movie theater, and a sports book that has a stunning panorama of Las Vegas Strip. Films through at least July will be screened in the parking lot, drive-in style, as they were last year to comply with COVID-19 restrictions. Film on the Rocks, the uber-popular film series run by Denver Film and Denver Arts and Venues, will return to Red Rocks Memorial Day weekend.įilm on the Rocks kicks off May 26 with “Dirty Dancing,” followed by a screening of “Jaws” on May 27. A Denver summer mainstay is back this year.