Audio comes through the FM radio, and tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children under 11 years old – but make sure to bring cash because the Big Sky does not take credit/debit cards. all week long, with the first movie starting at dusk – and even pets are allowed to enjoy the show (if they're well-behaved turn off your cell phones, pups). (This weekend features two doubles, one star-studded twin-spin with "Top Gun: Maverick" and "Elvis" as well as all-ages entertainment with "Minions 2" and "Jurassic World: Dominion.") The drive-in opens at 7:45 p.m. ![]() N9199 Winnebago Rd, Wisconsin Dells (about an hour and 50 minutes from Milwaukee)Ĭheck out the big screens at the Big Sky in Wisconsin Dells, featuring two full-sized outdoor screens playing two-for-one first-run feature films nightly. Here are several Wisconsin drive-ins still keeping the glorious tradition of movie-going – both retro and current – alive and well. Over the past several year, people have rediscovered the magic of watching stars on the big screen under the stars – a great and unique experience no matter how the movie on screen turns out. And now that the weather's finally begun cooperating and big new blockbusters are beginning to come out, we can roll film on rolling out to the movies again in our sweet rides. ![]() While the state's cineplexes continue to evolve out of their intermission and people continue to adjust to being in crowds – especially indoors – a disappearing part of moviegoing's past remains a piece of the moviegoing present: the drive-in.
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