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When it was rebuilt in 1968 as part of a multi-purpose building, occupying the seventh floor, it changed its name to the
Shinjuku Musashinokan. Its owner, Musashino Kōgyō, also started other theaters using the name, such as the Ōi Musashinokan and the Nakano Musashinokan.
96:. Originally started as the Musashinokan in May 1920, it quickly became Tokyo's premiere independent high-class theater showing foreign films. The theater program featured top-level film criticism and a committee of the managers and
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The
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helped program the films shown there. It was also famous in the
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A Page of
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154:(in Japanese). Shinjuku-ku Kyōiku Iinkai.
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