Cinemark14 Screens
This business has not yet been claimed by the owner or a representative.
850 East Highway 114, Roanoke, TX 76262, USA
Beck Group designed it. Cinemark opened on August 13, 2015, as one of the first full deployments of the company’s NextGen cinema concept in North Texas. 14 screens. 53,000 square feet. Luxury Lounger recliners throughout all auditoriums from day one. D-BOX motion seats in three rooms. XD in Theater 8. A full bar with frozen cocktails alongside the standard concessions. Nothing about this building was added later.
August 13, 2015. Beck Group drew up the building. Cinemark’s NextGen concept went in from the start. Luxury Lounger recliners in every auditorium before the doors opened. Most chains retrofitted. Roanoke was built around the recliner.
53,000 square feet. 14 screens. 1,177 seats. Theater 8 is the XD room: 160 seats, 4K Barco projection, 11.1-channel surround. D-BOX motion seats are spread across three auditoriums. The smallest rooms hold 50.
The bar was open on day one. Beer, wine, frozen cocktails. Pizza Hut pizza is baked on-site. An arcade and a party space for private bookings are also in the building.
Highway 114 runs east-west through Roanoke. Fort Worth to the south. Grapevine and DFW Airport to the east. The cinema sits on the eastern edge of town, a short drive from Trophy Club and Westlake.
Theater 8 is the XD auditorium. The screen goes wall to wall, floor to ceiling. Barco 4K. The 11.1-channel surround system is specific to XD; standard auditoriums run a different configuration. D-BOX is also in Theater 8, alongside Theater 1 and Theater 7.
14 screens. The smallest rooms have 50 seats. Largest at 160. RealD 3D on select screens.
Not every film is encoded for D-BOX. The seats move in sync with the on-screen action when the format is active. Showtime listings flag which screenings carry it. D-BOX books at a premium.
Luxury Lounger recliners in every auditorium. Full extension, with powered footrests. This was the specification from opening day, not a renovation that came later. Stadium rake throughout.
D-BOX is in Theater 1 (98 seats), Theater 7 (129), and Theater 8 (160). In each room, the D-BOX seats take up a section. The rest of the room is a standard recliner.
Reserved seating. All screenings. Pick your seat at the point of purchase: via the app, at cinemark.com, or at the lobby kiosk.
Movie Club is Cinemark’s monthly subscription. Members get one ticket per month, a discount on additional admissions, and reduced concession pricing. It is the most cost-effective way to use this cinema regularly, particularly for anyone coming more than twice a month.
XD carries the widest blockbuster releases. D-BOX follows alongside. The slate is mainstream first-run. Showtimes from 9:00 AM. Last showing around 11:00 PM.
Party room bookings are available for private events. The arcade operates independently of showtime schedules.
XD carries a premium over standard digital. D-BOX adds a further charge. Current rates at cinemark.com or (682) 831-9498. Matinee pricing on earlier sessions.
The Cinemark app, cinemark.com, or the lobby kiosks. Movie Club members apply benefits through the app. Fandango covers this location but charges a booking fee on top.
Concession pre-orders through the Cinemark app can be collected at a dedicated counter.
Frozen cocktails at the bar. Beer and wine, too. Not something you find at most suburban Texas multiplexes. The bar runs alongside the main concession counter.
Pizza Hut pizza is baked fresh on-site. Popcorn, coffee, fountain drinks, candy, and hot snacks at the counter. Mobile ordering through the Cinemark app for pick-up or during the film.
The arcade is in the building. Useful for guests arriving early or waiting between screenings.
Assisted with listening devices at the box office. Ask when you collect your tickets. No reservation needed.
Wheelchair access throughout. Recliner auditoriums have wider aisle spacing than traditional seat configurations. Accessible parking in the free surface lot near the entrance.
Call (682) 831-9498 before your visit for specific auditorium questions, particularly regarding D-BOX seat access.
850 E. Highway 114, Roanoke, TX 76262. South side of Highway 114, eastern Roanoke.
Fort Worth, 23 miles south. DFW Airport is about 15 miles east. Grapevine Lake, 2 miles north.
Free surface lot on-site. No validation. Busy Friday and Saturday evenings, but rarely full.
585 people in the early 1960s. 2,810 by 2000. 9,665 at the 2020 census. Roanoke has grown faster than almost any comparably small city in Denton County, at 3.77% annually.
Tom Thumb runs a major distribution centre here. United Supermarkets does too. Martin-Brower, which handles McDonald’s supply chain logistics, operates out of Roanoke. Highway 114 and US-377 intersect in the city, which made it a distribution node before the residential growth followed.
Byron Nelson Boulevard is the main east-west road through downtown. Named after the golfer who lived in Roanoke for decades. Nelson won 18 PGA Tour events in 1945. One season. The AT&T Byron Nelson tournament still uses his name.
The town was laid out in 1881 by a Texas and Pacific Railway surveyor who named it after his hometown in Virginia. Before that, it was the Medlin Settlement, 20 families from Missouri, founded in 1847. Bonnie and Clyde stayed at a hotel here in the 1930s.