Is this isolated movie theater the most San Francisco place in San Francisco?

When the New Balboa Theater opened in the outer Outer Richmond District in 1926, the cinema might as well have been operating in the Farallon Islands.

Market Street had a wealth of new movie palaces, and Balboa Street between 37th and 38th avenues was still marked by empty lots and lit by gas street lamps. But the cinema-building Levin family believed in this isolated foggy outpost, hiring the Cliff House and Fairmont Hotel architects to design an 800-seat neighborhood theater.

Bigger and less remote west-of-Masonic movie theaters — the Coronet and Alexandria included — have long since shuttered. But the Balboa abides, through a combination of hard work, neighborhood support, a wild and perfect film mix (“Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure,” “Fruitvale Station” and “The Fugitive” all playing in the next week) and one of the most fascinating retail ecosystems in the city…

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