What Not to do at the Movies
Bringing kids to R rated movies? Talking to the screen? Here's some advice for you.
Michael Cera and Jonah Hill in Columbia Pictures' "Superbad" -
Columbia Pictures
Watching a movie is -- or should be -- a solitary experience. A good movie can draw you into its world and immerse you completely in the story. That's why the screens are so big and the sound systems are so loud: to help you lose yourself in the action. If you're completely absorbed, it doesn't matter if you're alone or with friends, because it's only you in the experience. The problem, of course, is that you're usually in a room full of people when you watch a movie. (Unless you're watching Dragon Wars: then you've probably got the place to yourself.) And as Sartre pointed out, hell is other people. People often forget (or don't care) that they're not by themselves in their living rooms, and they do things that are distracting to other audience members. These distractions pull you out of the experience and can prevent you from fully enjoying the movie. Everyone already knows about the people whose cell phones ring, and even worse, the people who actually answer them. To kill such a person is generally looked on by most courts as justifiable homicide. But what about the other jerks, the ones whose crimes are not as frequently discussed? Here's my list of... THE 5 TYPES OF IDIOTS YOU MEET IN MOVIE THEATERS: 1.) Bad parents. 2.) People who must vocalize every thought they have (a.k.a That's A Pretty Dress Syndrome). 3.) People who must prove that they possess basic comprehension skills. 4.) People at Adam Sandler movies. 5. Poor planners. Don't get Eric D. Snider started on candy-wrapper-rattlers either. Most Popular Stories
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Nosferatu: A Symphony of HorrorFilm.com's FREE movie of the week is "Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror." This 1922 classic of cinema based on Bram Stoker's "Dracula" (but with names changed) directed by F.W. Murnau and starring Max Schrek in one of films most famous and frightening make-up jobs.
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