Demonstrates the fact that Philadelphia was, to some extent, on the cinematic cutting-edge during the 1960’s. Of course, the bulk of the movies advertised in the Inquirer seem to be the standard big-budget Hollywood fare, but there were also theaters, like the Bryn Mawr, that were up-to-speed on world cinema movements. The fact that this article was included in the “Amusements and the Arts” section is proof that there was interested in this type of film in Philadelphia. By A. Migdail
This review of “Fun in Acapulco” starring Elvis is a perfect reminder that it wasn’t all—or even mostly—art-house movies that played in Philadelphia in 1963 (notice, however, the advertisement for Fellini’s 8 ½ in the lower right-hand corner of the review.) It is also a clue as to the character of the Randolph theater, as opposed to, for instance, the Boyd (which was playing exclusively “Cinerama”-type blockbusters at the time) or the Bryn Mawr Theater, which tended to show artsier, foreign films. By A. Migdail

