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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Coen Brothers Film Festival Brings Fargo, The Big Lebowski Back To Big Screen

The Big Lebowski

It’s hard to overstate the impact Joel and Ethan Coen have had on American film. Beginning with 1984’s Blood Simple, the two brothers from Minneapolis were a major influence on the indie revolution of the 1990s. 1987’s Raising Arizona made a star out of Nicolas Cage and proved that smart, surrealist comedy could attract an audience. Today, the TV series inspired by their Cannes- and Academy Award-winning 1996 film Fargo, keeps their legacy alive by being one of the consistently best things on the little screen.
With new film releases scarce because of the pandemic, Malco Theatres is celebrating the Coen brothers with a mini-film festival, which runs from November 20-26. The six titles represent a cross-section of the Coens’ work, from legendary comedy to existential drama. And the price is right, at $2 per ticket.

The twin crown jewels of the Coens’ filmography came out back to back in 1996 and 1998. Fargo is a crime thriller like no other. Frances McDormand, who happens to be Joel’s wife, won her first Oscar for her portrayal of Marge Gundersen, police chief of Brainard, Minnesota, who uncovers a plot by used car salesman Jerry Lundegaard (William H. Macy) to fake the kidnapping of his wife Jean (Kristin Rudrud) that goes terribly wrong. Here’s McDormand delivering one of the greatest soliloquies in all of film history as she takes kidnapper Gaear (Peter Stormare) to face justice.

Coen Brothers Film Festival Brings Fargo, The Big Lebowski Back To Big Screen

Two years later, the Coens took a wild left turn and made one of the most beloved comedies of all time. The Big Lebowski forever associated Jeff Bridges with The Dude, an unreconstructed hippie turned amateur detective. Intended as a parody of Southern California noir classics like The Big Sleep, The Big Lebowski’s greatest strength is as a series of indelible character sketches. Just check out this legendary bowling alley scene with Bridges, John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, and John Turturro.

Coen Brothers Film Festival Brings Fargo, The Big Lebowski Back To Big Screen (2)

2003’s Intolerable Cruelty is a rarity. It did not start out as a Coen script, but the brothers took over the production and rewrote it. It’s not one of their classics, but if anyone else had made it, it would have been the highlight of their career. It features remarkable comedic performances from George Clooney, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Cedric the Entertainer, and Billy Bob Thornton.

Coen Brothers Film Festival Brings Fargo, The Big Lebowski Back To Big Screen (3)

2007’s No Country for Old Men was the Coens’ adaptation of a late-period Cormac McCarthy novel which won Best Picture, Best Director(s), and Best Screenplay Oscars, as well as Best Supporting Actor Oscar for Javier Bardem as the killer Anton Chigurh.

Coen Brothers Film Festival Brings Fargo, The Big Lebowski Back To Big Screen (4)

2008’s Burn After Reading saw the Coens returning to Big Lebowski-style comedy, this time set in Washington DC. It features a powerhouse cast, including McDormand, John Malkovich, George Clooney, Tilda Swinton, and Brad Pitt. Here’s McDormand and Pitt trying to blackmail soon-to-be-former CIA agent Malkovich.

Coen Brothers Film Festival Brings Fargo, The Big Lebowski Back To Big Screen (5)

The next year, the Coens returned to their Midwestern Jewish roots with A Serious Man, which they describe as a Yiddish folk tale that never was.

Coen Brothers Film Festival Brings Fargo, The Big Lebowski Back To Big Screen (6)

You can review Malco’s COVID policies here and buy tickets for the Coen Brothers Film Festival here, on their website.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

From Ava Gardner to Reese Witherspoon to King Kong, a Classic Week at The Movies

Eva Gardner in Pandora and the Flying Dutchman

It’s a week of classics on the big screen in Memphis. First up, tonight, March 10th, a new regular film series begins at Black Lodge. Steve Ross, who recently retired as Professor Emeritus of the University of Memphis’ Communications and Film Department, was approached by his former film students Chad Allen Barton and Stephen Hildreth and Lodge owner Matt Martin to share some of his favorites with audiences.

“I immediately thought of Black Lodge as the perfect venue for a series of American films from the 1950’s—specifically, glossy melodramas by directors like Vincent Minnelli and Douglas Sirk,” says Ross. “These were enormously popular films that were too overwrought, too excessive, and too flamboyant to be taken seriously by critics at the time of their release. Black Lodge has never shied away from films that some might condemn as disreputable. And Written On The Wind is one of the most disreputable examples of high-gloss melodramas with sly undercurrents of satire running through them.”

The screening is free, and the show starts at 7 p.m. tonight. Check out the wild opening credit sequence of Written On The Wind to get a taste of delicious disreputability, 1956-style.

From Ava Gardner to Reese Witherspoon to King Kong, a Classic Week at The Movies (2)

Tomorrow, Wednesday March 11th, Indie Memphis’ weekly film series presents another melodrama from the 1950s. Pandora and the Flying Dutchman was Ava Gardner’s first bona fide star vehicle. It’s a weird supernatural thriller from director Albert Lewin that has Gardner cast as a femme fatale named for the demi-goddess of chaos and James Mason as the possible incarnation of the Flying Dutchman. Also, there are racecars. The 4K restoration of the film screens at Malco Ridgeway at 7 p.m.

From Ava Gardner to Reese Witherspoon to King Kong, a Classic Week at The Movies

On Thursday night at Crosstown Theater, the Arthouse series presents a doozy. Reese Witherspoon got an Oscar for playing June Carter Cash, but 10 years earlier she was a crazed Little Red Riding Hood taking preemptive revenge on big bad Kiefer Southerland in one of the weirder post-Pulp Fiction sordid crime pictures. Behold the sleazy glory of Freeway, playing at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday night.

From Ava Gardner to Reese Witherspoon to King Kong, a Classic Week at The Movies (3)

On Sunday, March 15th at 1 p.m., Turner Classic Movies is bringing King Kong to the Malco Paradiso. Is it just me, or did it always seem like a really bad idea to bring the big ape to Broadway? This is not a hindsight thing. Just seems like common sense. But what do I know about showbiz?

From Ava Gardner to Reese Witherspoon to King Kong, a Classic Week at The Movies (4)

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Oscar Contenders, Hitchcock, and the International Jewish Film Festival Kickoff This Week At The Movies

Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint pause for refreshment in North By Northwest.

We’ve got some good stuff on Memphis screens this week, if you’re looking for fare beyond the multiplex.

On Wednesday, January 29th, at Studio on the Square, Indie Memphis is getting warmed up for the new cinema with Pedro Almodóvar’s Pain and Glory. The 70-year-old Spanish filmmaker’s latest earned Antonio Banderas a Best Actor award when it debuted at Cannes. Banderas, who starred alongside the great but perpetually underutilized Penelope Cruz, is up for Best Actor at next weekend’s Academy Awards, and the film is in contention for Best International Feature. It’s also Spain’s biggest box office hit in a decade.

Oscar Contenders, Hitchcock, and the International Jewish Film Festival Kickoff This Week At The Movies

On Thursday, January 30th, the annual Morris and Mollye Fogelman International Jewish Film Festival kicks off with a gala screening at the Malco Paradiso. The Keeper tells the true story of Bert Trautmann, a German soldier during World War II who relocated to the UK after spending time in a POW camp. Trautmann became the goalie for Manchester United and led the storied football team to victory in the 1956 FA Cup. His love for a Jewish woman causes controversy and calls into question everyone’s assumptions. The screening starts at 7 p.m., and you can find more details about the month-long festival at the JCC Memphis website.

Oscar Contenders, Hitchcock, and the International Jewish Film Festival Kickoff This Week At The Movies (2)

Back at Studio on the Square on Thursday night, one of the best films from a GOAT. Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest re-teamed him with Cary Grant, whom he first worked with in 1941’s Suspicion. Grant plays Roger Thornhill, a caddish ad executive who inadvertently gets caught up in Cold War spy-jinx while he romances possible secret agent Eva Marie Saint. The blockbuster hit of 1959 has inspired countless imitators through the decades and remains the commercial pinnacle of Hitch’s career. One of these days, I’ll get the opportunity to use my favorite line from the film: When a train station clerk notices Grant’s sunglasses and asks if there’s something wrong with his eyes, Grant responds, “Yes, they’re sensitive to questions.” The film screens at 7 and 9:45 p.m. Here’s the original trailer:

Oscar Contenders, Hitchcock, and the International Jewish Film Festival Kickoff This Week At The Movies (3)

See you at the movies! 

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

MXT vs IMAX: Which Big Screen Format Is Better?

In Malco’s newest theater, the Powerhouse Cinema Grill, the region’s dominant theater chain debuted a new theater design they call MXT. In December 2016, theater one in the Malco Paradiso was converted to IMAX. The giant screen and booming sound system is generally considered to be the gold standard of theatrical film viewing experience. At the Powerhouse press tour on March 7th, Malco representatives were touting MXT as superior to IMAX.

Is that true? Well, it’s complicated. Creating a viewing experience is really more a matter of finding the best solution to a set of variables than it is simply buying the perfect equipment and plugging it in. Some of my best film memories are from squinting at a CRT in a dorm room, and I’ve had painful viewing experiences put on by supposed professionals. It’s all relative. As I tell young filmmakers when they ask about cameras, the best one is the one you know how to use.

Your average living room HD flatscreen presents an image that measures 1920 pixels horizontally and 1080 pixels vertically. If you sprung for a 4K TV last Christmas, you’re looking at a 4096 X 2160 pixel picture. The current highest possible resolution outside of a lab is 70 mm IMAX film. That venerable format, familiar from museum settings and Disney World, is said to be the equivalent of 8K digital video. But that number is a rough estimate at best, as comparing digital video to analog is apples to oranges. Most digital cinema screens installed in the last 10 years use 2K (2048 X 1080) projectors, which provide more than three times as much “visual information” over a much larger area than your home HD set. Digital IMAX screens, like the one at the Paradiso, generally use a pair of proprietary 2K projectors working together, which greatly increases the light and provides a stereo visual channel for 3D, but doesn’t significantly increase the resolution.

But projector resolution is only one variable. If you’ve got a 4K TV, but the movie you’re watching was shot on a 2K camera, those extra pixels aren’t going to do you much good. Even on a big home screen with a clean signal, the difference between a 1080HD and a 4K screen is not going to be terribly apparent to casual viewers. Only when you blow the image up to theater size will you begin to see a significant difference.

You might have done a little mental math earlier and come to the conclusion that conventional 35mm film stock would have a higher pixel resolution than the 2K digital projectors that replaced them. But once again, that’s comparing apples to oranges. The intricacies of information theory notwithstanding, digital projection as a whole has been an improvement, says Malco Theaters Regional Director of Digital Operations Scott Barden. Film projectors are fragile, complicated machines, and celluloid film runs the risk of damage every time it’s run through one. Yes, a pristine print on a finely tuned and perfectly maintained film projector with a brand new bulb will probably look better than 2K digital projection, but that has always a rare set of circumstances in the real world. Barden says digital projection has allowed Malco, who, unlike many theater chains, take their presentation seriously, to present a more consistent product to audiences.

Where IMAX has an advantage over conventional theater projection is in the control of the variables. The screens are huge, and the theaters are custom built to take advantage of the unique, curved geometry of the IMAX. Until last week, theater one in the Paradiso was the undisputed champion of the city’s screening rooms.

The new MXT theater in the Powerhouse Cinema Grill is built like a conventional theater. Malco VP Karen Melton said its screen is virtually identical to pre-IMAX Paradiso theater one. But the projector is a brand-new, state of the art 4K laser phosphor model. The new projector presents a number of advantages for the theater. For decades, the heart of the projector has been a xenon light bulb of enormous power. They work great, but they have a number of disadvantages. First, a lot of the electricity fed into the bulb is wasted, as it is converted to heat instead of light. All that access heat has to be removed from the projector through a vent that goes through the roof of the theater. Lasers are much more efficient at producing light, and so produce a lot less heat, which can be dissipated without sawing a hole in the ceiling. Second, the expensive bulbs wear out, losing lumens over time until they eventually have to be replaced. Running one full blast will result in rapid degradation. “We typically run xenon lamps at a certain level so we get a very even drop off of the light level,” says Barden. “You don’t really notice over time. There’s not going to be a big drop off a the end, the way we run the bulbs.”

Fresh out of the box! The newly-installed 4K laser-phosphor projector at the heart of the Powerhouse’s MXT theater.

The laser-phosphor projector uses high wattage blue lasers fired through a constantly changing matrix of color filters to produce an image. More light makes it to the screen, and there’s no bulb to burn out, which greatly reduces maintenance costs.

Last Thursday, the stars aligned such that I was able to make a direct comparison between the two systems. I watched the Live Aid sequence from Bohemian Rhapsody on the Powerhouse MXT screen, then caught the Captain Marvel premiere at the Paradiso IMAX.

Which one was better? Visually, I would call it a toss up. The clarity and color of the image from the MXT 4K laser projector is mind blowing. But that IMAX theater architecture really does have a big effect. For Captain Marvel, I bought my ticket only 10 days in advance, so I was stuck in seat A-13—front row center, and it was fine. It’s true there are no bad seats in that theater.

The big difference was the sound, where MXT has the advantage. In keeping with their goals of creating an immersive experience, IMAX is configured to maximize the subwoofer boom effect. Rattling the chest makes those big explosions feel more visceral. Malco opted to pair a Dolby Atmos system with the 4K laser projector in the MXT theater. “The audio is something we wanted to do specifically for large format,” says Barden. “It’s got full Dolby Atmos, a 38-channel surround sound system, which is spectacular for the auditorium.”

For creating an immersive experience, I’d much rather have Atmos than 3D. With the exceptions of Avatar, The Walk, and Alita: Battle Angel, 3D has never risen from gimmick to art form for me. But you should never underestimate the power of great sound design. The entire horror genre is practically built on it.

Inside the MXT theater.

For me, the bottom line comes down to the source material. If some or all of the film you’re going to see was shot in the IMAX format, such as Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar, then you should see it in the IMAX theater. For any other film, including big Hollywood productions such as the digitally shot Marvel and Star Wars franchises, I would choose the superior sound at the Powerhouse MXT. But unless you’re a nerd like me, either theater is going to deliver a good experience — as long as the movie is good. Which is something else entirely.

[This piece was edited to clean up errant pixel counts.]

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Film Features Film/TV

Downtown Movies: the Powerhouse Cinema Grill

On Thursday, March 7th, Malco Theaters will open its newest movie palace. The Powerhouse Cinema Grill is located at the intersection of Front and G.E. Patterson. The seven-screen theater incorporates a 1914 building that once housed steam generators for the next door train station.

The brick building topped with a distinctive, towering smokestack, sat dormant for decades until it was repurposed as an art gallery by Delta Axis in 2003. When William Eggleston agreed to open the gallery, he shocked everyone by not mounting an exhibit of his groundbreaking color photography, but instead putting on an organ concert in the cavernous, echoing main room. This will not be the first time films have been exhibited in the Powerhouse. It was home to Indie Memphis’ Microcinema programs until the gallery closed in 2009.

Laura Jean Hocking

Malco brings movies back to Downtown Memphis with the new Powerhouse Cinema Grill.

The Powerhouse Cinema Grill will be the first movie theater in the Downtown area since the Muvico Peabody Place 22 theater closed during the 2008 financial crisis. For most of the 20th century, Malco Theaters either had theaters and offices in Downtown Memphis, including the Orpheum Theatre on Beale Street. “We left Downtown Memphis over 40 years ago,” says David Tashie, senior vice-president of operations. “Downtown is in the midst of a resurgence, and we wanted to be a part of it with a new concept restaurant and boutique theater. Being in a project with Henry Turley and the Wilson Family was appealing, along with the parking lot on the site. We are very excited to be bringing the Powerhouse Cinema Grill to the historic Downtown South Main District.”

The three-year project coordinated with the Tennessee Historic Preservation Office and the Federal Transit Administration to retain and preserve the foundation and the exterior of the 1919 brick building on G.E. Patterson. Then a matching extension, stretching to Front Street, was added to house the screens. The opening of the Powerhouse comes at a strange time for the theatrical end of the movie business. To hear some in the industry tell it, it is the worst of times. The streaming model of internet video delivery, pioneered by Netflix, threatens the traditional distribution model, which starts with a six- to eight-week window of exclusivity in brick-and-morter theaters and ends with a home video release. The most recent manifestation of this kind of thinking is the controversy around Alfonso Cuarón’s Roma. Produced independently in Mexico and acquired by Netflix, Roma was nominated for 10 Oscars and earned Cuarón Academy Awards for Best Director, Best Cinematography, and Best Foreign Language Film. But Netflix did the bare minimum to qualify for the annual awards: Roma ran theatrically for only three weeks in New York and Los Angeles, and even then didn’t go through the existing distribution system. No lesser light than Steven Spielberg, who represents the directors on the Academy board, is leading an effort to get future Netflix releases classified as TV movies, and thus excluded from the Academy Awards.

But then there are the facts on the ground: Hollywood sold $11.8 billion worth of theater tickets domestically in 2018, and more than $41 billion worldwide — a new record, and, according to Variety, up over 7 percent from 2017. And fears of losing the youth to their smartphones likewise have not yet materialized. 64.4 percent of moviegoers were between the ages of 18 and 44.

Most of the theaters in the new Powerhouse Cinema Grill are equipped with recliners.

This is the situation that Malco, which owns 34 theaters with more than 300 screens across the Mid-South, is responding to with the Powerhouse. The theatrical exhibition business has been competing with television since the 1950s, and they are bringing the same weapons to the streaming fight that have worked for 70 years: bigger screens and better amenties. The cinema features seven screens, but this is no mall multiplex. The restored Powerhouse building houses a lobby restaurant with a wood-fired brick pizza oven, and you can get your food delivered to you in the theater. The theaters feature “luxury reclining seats” and, following the lead of the successful IMAX Paradiso launch, you can pick your seats when you buy the tickets. The first film confirmed for the new venue is Captain Marvel.

“Our family has been in this business for over 100 years, and we’ve always embraced any new idea that enhances the moviegoing experience for our patrons,” Tashie says. “We believe the Powerhouse amenities will add to the already fun and exciting experience of going out to the movies.”

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

“INCONCEIVABLE!” Fantasy Lineup For Saturday Night’s Time Warp Drive-In

The May edition of the Time Warp Drive-In series is a smorgasbord of tasty fantasy treats from the 1980s.

The Last Unicorn

Saturday night at 7 PM at the Malco Summer Avenue Drive-In, the More Dreams Of Gods And Magic program opens with a stone cold classic. Rob Riener’s 1987 adaptation of William Goldman’s novel The Princess Bride was added the National Film Registry in 2016. It has become, as is said of Casablanca, a film consisting entirely of quotable lines. Here’s one of the film’s iconic scenes, the battle of wits between Wesley, aka Dread Pirate Roberts, and evil mastermind Vizzini, for the life of the hostage Princess Buttercup. Also like Casablanca, virtually everyone in this film went on to have a great career. Carey Elwes, who played Wesley, will be the mayor in season three of Stranger Things. Wallace Shawn, who played Vizzini, is an acclaimed playwright who broke into film with the 1981 adaptation of his play My Dinner With André and, at age 74, is still working as a voice over artist on Bojack Horseman. And Princess Buttercup is Robin Wright, who has received four straight Emmy nominations for her role as the first lady in House Of Cards, and just last year appeared in both Wonder Woman and Blade Runner 2049. Even if you think you have it memorized, check out this tour de force scene:

‘INCONCEIVABLE!’ Fantasy Lineup For Saturday Night’s Time Warp Drive-In

The second film is another literary adaptation, this time of the 1972 Newberry Award winner Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH. The children’s book is something like a cross between Watership Down and Flowers For Algernon, although maybe not as depressing as that might sound. The 1982 film version The Secret Of NIMH was spearheaded by Don Bluth, the former Disney animator who became the House Of Mouse’s nemesis during the 1980s, when he had a run of films with MGM that included The Land Before Time. Bluth is also famous among gamers for his work on the beautiful but unplayable Dragon’s Lair, which pioneered what would later be called DVD ROM games. The film is more than a little cheesy, but makes up for it with some amazing classical animation.

‘INCONCEIVABLE!’ Fantasy Lineup For Saturday Night’s Time Warp Drive-In (2)

The Secret of NIMH was released in 1982 at the height of the post-Star Wars sci fi fantasy boom. Sharing screen time that year were the last two films on the Time Warp slate. The Last Unicorn was a Rankin/Bass production with a killer voice actor lineup that included Mia Farrow, Angela Landsbury, Jeff Bridges, and Christopher Lee. It’s perhaps most significant for the young Japanese animation crew who got their start on the film and would go on to form the core of Studio Ghibli.

‘INCONCEIVABLE!’ Fantasy Lineup For Saturday Night’s Time Warp Drive-In (3)

And finally, there’s Krull. By 1982’s lofty standards, Krull is not a good movie. If it were released today, it would be probably make $500 million. Nowadays, the film’s biggest attraction is the elaborate pre-digital special effects, which include the high point of that light-leak video laser thing. The screenplay is a bloody mess of Lucas-damaged Hero’s Journey cliches, but veteran British character actors Freddy Jones and Franchesca Annis occasionally step in to elevate the proceedings with committed performances that the material probably didn’t deserve. But hey, that’s why you spend your money on the Brits—they always bring it. 

‘INCONCEIVABLE!’ Fantasy Lineup For Saturday Night’s Time Warp Drive-In (4)

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News The Fly-By

Central Station Plan Makes it “Central” Again

A hotel, movie theater, restaurant, new apartments, shops, and maybe a grocery store are coming to the century-old Central Station in a $55 million project unveiled last week.

Henry Turley Co. and Community Capital have been working for more than a year on a plan for the South Main campus that is now home to an Amtrak station, apartments, the Memphis Railroad and Trolley museum, event space, and the Memphis Farmers Market. The companies plan to bring more activity to the area by building new access to trolleys, trains, housing, entertainment, shopping, buses, and for cyclists and pedestrians.

“Our theme as we’ve moved through this process has been to make Central Station central,” Archie Willis, president of Community Capital, told members of the Memphis Area Transit Authority’s (MATA) finance committee Friday.

Henry Turley Co.

Artist’s rendering of Central Station improvements

The plan would transform the tower of the Central Station building into a boutique hotel. Willis said Friday he’s been in talks with the Kemmons Wilson Companies, which has been in talks with “major” hotel companies interested in the project.

Partners are “ready to go,” Willis said, and are awaiting approval from MATA to begin final negotiations. Willis said he expected construction on the hotel to begin in the middle of next year and wrap up by Elvis Week 2017. Hudson Hall, the event space inside the station, would become a meeting space or ballroom for the new hotel. The new restaurant would be inside the hotel.

Malco Theaters would build a movie theater on the southeast corner of Front and G.E. Patterson. The Powerhouse would be converted into the theater’s ticket counter and refreshment station, according to the plan. The theater would be a five-screen, two-story, art-house movie theater, Willis said. The building would have a modern look with glass and brick, and it would be accented with neon signage. Construction there could begin early next year with a planned opening around the end of 2016.

About 370 new apartment units would be built on the site, mainly in the big empty lot behind the station. The plan shows that a grocery store could be built adjacent to the apartment building.

The Memphis Farmers Market would be moved to the southeast corner of Main and G.E. Patterson in four new open-air pavilions. Willis said there is no firm plan yet for the Railroad and Trolley Museum, but its move to a new location would be “as good or better” than the current location in the first floor of Central Station.

To open and connect the entire campus, the trolley stop next to the Powerhouse would be relocated, maybe to Main Street. Also, a new concourse would be opened in the big wall that fronts Main Street where the wall now meets the Central Station building.

Much of the funding for the project would come from federal government grants. MATA president Ron Garrison said local entities would only need to come up with about $600,000 to draw the remaining money to fund the $55 million project. The full MATA board will vote on the project on April 27th.