I've never been to (or even seen) one of these luxury theaters you guys speak of where you can order food and drinks and have recliner seats etc. When you say order food, are you talking ordering food like in a restaurant? You can actually order a full meal and eat it while watching the movie? Is there tables in front of your chairs? Do you just eat it off your lap? Are there waiters walking around during the movie? Wouldn't this be very disruptive to the viewing experience?
As others mentioned, yes. The CineBowl (they have a bowling alley) near me, you place your order as you go in, sit down, they bring it to you, there are slide out mini-tables (like those desk-chairs in schools?) in your loge seat, or a table in front of you. I believe teh Alamo Drafthouse has become a successful chain. Many local theaters have used this model of the "drink beer, eat some noshies while we screen the film."
…Then I found an old drive in theater that is about 30 minutes away, 40-45 with traffic.... and I LOVE IT! All new films, showing them on the day they release, plus it is $5.00 per adult, and $1.00 for kids. My wife and I get to go for $10.00, stop at a store before hand, bring in our own snacks for dirt cheap, sit in the AC because you don't need to open any windows, as you tune your radio to the station for the surround sound.
Erm. You sit and run your engine for two hours throughout the movie? Not such a great deal for the atmosphere, but glad that you like it. :-\ (teasing)(
… Another thing that REALLY is starting to effect my enjoyment of a cinema visit is the behaviour of the rest of the audience as mentioned by others. Twice in the last three visits on the day of release there has been somebody doing something that spoilt it. ….
Your examples were extreme, but I suspect we've all had them. I've been to screenings wehre different people were all "Shhhh!" to someone's grandkid, and were the grandparents doing anything? Nope. It amazes me (sign of getting old and crochety) that theaters now have pre-screening PSAs not just about "silence your phone" but "don't use your phone" and "don't talk throughout the movie" and so forth. Think: they have pre-feature PSAs asking people to behave appropriately for a movie theater that isn't their living room.
I appreciate seeing a film with an audience that's engaged, but I'm old enough to rmember what that was like on the second weekend of Star Wars [sic] in 1977. We sighed, we gasped, we cheered, we clapped — together.
I'll be insensitive enough to share that when I heard of the Aurora, CO, theater massacre, after getting over the shock, I thought, "Wait, someone brought a BABY to a midnight screening of a loud, violent PG-13 movie?! Wait, someone brought a six year old to a midnight screening of a PG-13 movie?? WHAT were these people thinking?" Clearly not, Gee it's after your bedtime, let's go to a matinee. Not, Hey, this movie's rating indicates not appropriate for pre-teens, maybe Mom and Dad should go see it first.
Doesn't excuse the violence that sicko inflicted on the audience, but to me it was an example of what theatrical moviegoing is like today. Not many people are thinking through whether it's appropriate to bring young children to a movie theater. They just do it, and to heck with the other paying customers if their kids aren't well-behaved.
IMHO, most movies where the person's name is used for the title tend to suck...
Well, LOCKE was pretty good. BRONSON. Doe the MEU films like Captain America, Iron Man, et al count here?
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