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Cellphones Movies Entertainment

The Average Movie Theater Has Hundreds of Screens 924

theodp writes "The "average" movie theater reportedly has a capacity of 200-300 people. Which, thanks to the wonder of mobile devices, means that it also has hundreds of screens. And — thanks to Facebook, Twitter, and texting — hundreds of potential annoyances. Which prompts NY film critic David Edelstein to ask: How Should We Treat Texters and Talkers at Movie Theaters? 'Has our culture become so private that no one knows how to behave anymore in public?' Edelstein wonders. 'Is selfishness the rule rather than exception? Are people who say, "Shut up and turn off your phone" today's version of "You kids get off my lawn"?' Jason Bailey argues that the only way to solve movie theaters' talking and texting problem is to give in to it, perhaps with anything-goes phone-friendly talk-amongst-yourselves screenings in the seven and eight o'clock hours coupled with no-tolerance shows later in the evening. Any other ideas?" You could always throw it.
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The Average Movie Theater Has Hundreds of Screens

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  • by redmid17 ( 1217076 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @07:08PM (#44149419)
    I have never, ever noticed this, not in a single movie. Talking on the phone would definitely be a problem, but I've never seen this either. Frankly I don't really give a shit if people are texting or surfing on their phone during the movie. I'm looking ahead at the screen. I find it hard to believe that it should really bother someone that much.
  • Re:Too Bright (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo ( 1000167 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @07:12PM (#44149437)
    Two words...Faraday Cage
  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @07:33PM (#44149583)
    One is "I wanna watch the damn movie", use a cellphone or talk too much and you get tossed out. The other is "I wanna be with my friends", anything goes. Run the experiment a couple months, see which gets the bigger audience. / Last movie I saw in a theater was Return of the King, due to talkative asshats // Second to last movie was The Two Towers
  • Re:Too Bright (Score:5, Interesting)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @07:36PM (#44149619)

    >"Like I said, it hasn't bothered me when people do it"

    I don't doubt it doesn't bother you (nor perhaps many other people), but not everyone is the same. Things that bother one person might not bother someone else at all (and in reverse). As a society, we have to understand that people are different and make a reasonable effort to prevent annoying others, even when it is not something that annoys ourselves.

  • Re:Too Bright (Score:3, Interesting)

    by breaddoughrising ( 310165 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @07:37PM (#44149637)

    Two words...Faraday Cage

    Exactly! Or just line the inside of the theater with dental blankets. No signal, no phone... at least communication. Your still going to have asshats playing apps that don't require signal.

  • by FuzzNugget ( 2840687 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @07:49PM (#44149725)
    like this [youtube.com]
  • I'm too nice (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Robotech_Master ( 14247 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @08:06PM (#44149805) Homepage Journal

    I was watching G.I. Joe: Retribution in a theater with a "zero tolerance" cell phone policy, and the jerk in front of me took his phone out and texted several times during the movie. I considered asking him to stop, but I just don't like getting into confrontations. I further considered going and telling a staffer, but I didn't want to miss part of the movie to do it. Also the guy was there with a kid, and I didn't want to be responsible for ruining the kid's movie experience.

    I'm just too nice. :P

  • Re:Too Bright (Score:2, Interesting)

    by gweilo8888 ( 921799 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @08:17PM (#44149857)
    This. I will support with my money any cinema that forcibly removes patrons who use their phones or other gadgets during the movie, or who loudly talk during the movie. If somebody makes a cinema without popcorn -- it smells to me like burnt rubber -- I'll happily pay twice as much. The future for me is cinemas with a large number of comparitively small but extremely high quality screens, good audio, properly calibrated and using equipment I cannot afford at home, and at most 6-8 seats which I can reserve in full. (And better still, I can start the movie at my chosen time, pause it if there's a distraction, rewind it, and so forth, simply paying by the hour.) Sadly, the movie industry is a dinosaur, and this kind of change will not happen on a large scale any time soon -- and so they will continue to very seldom receive my money.
  • by LVSlushdat ( 854194 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @08:21PM (#44149895)

    *IF* I were to go a movie theater, I'd do the same thing I do with the smartphone at Church.. put it on vibrate. Yeah.. I know, why take your phone to Church? I volunteer with the local Redcross chapter's Disaster Action Team (DAT Team) and am often oncall over the weekend and have to respond quicky.. We're the guys/gals who provide food/clothing/lodging from the Redcross for people whose house/apartment burns down. Normally we have two volunteers oncall from Friday night to Monday morning for the weekend shift, but Las Vegas had a very large apartment fire (70 people displaced) several weekends ago, and we had to call out additional volunteers to get everybody taken care of, and since I was the primary oncall person, and I was in Church at the time, I had to leave kinda suddenly...

  • Re:Too Bright (Score:2, Interesting)

    by redmid17 ( 1217076 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @08:43PM (#44150023)
    Any real proof to that assertion?
  • by HockeyPuck ( 141947 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @09:17PM (#44150185)

    $5 for a popcorn, $5 for a soda, $5 for a box of Junior Mints...

    Might I suggest eating before you go to the movies?

    Really, can you really not go two and a half hours without a meal or intaking 2000 calories and 500mg of salt?

    The reason why it's so expensive for you to go to the movies is that you're not going to the movies and getting a snack, you're going to dinner and watching a movie. a $12 ticket plus $15 worth of food.

    It used to be you could offset this by the fact that you were getting a higher quality picture and sound, but anymore a HDTV and surround sound are pretty common

    You're 50-60-70in TV with 5.1 surround isn't the same quality is what the theaters have. Sure maybe so really cheapo theaters but the standard AMC theaters have over a dozen channels along the sides alone. And yes watching a movie on a 50ft wide screen is considerably different than on a TV.

    Again, you're spending almost $30 to go to the movies... Try eating beforehand and then compare the experience to a $12 ticket or...

    Go to the matinee show. Tickets are usually half price...

  • Re:Too Bright (Score:5, Interesting)

    by AthanasiusKircher ( 1333179 ) on Sunday June 30, 2013 @11:21PM (#44150673)

    I have actually been at a movie premier, full theater, movie is actually running and past the opening credits, when the guy in front of me gets a phone call. After lots of shushing he says loudly enough for everyone to hear "I have to go, I'm in the middle of Star Trek".

    Yeah, the obliviousness of some people to others knows no bounds. I was once at an opera, where everyone had paid at least 4-5 times what one pays per person to go to the movies (and many quite a bit more), and the guy in the row in front of me -- in the middle of the opera -- answers his phone after it rings and begins talking loudly: "Hello!? Yeah. I'm at the opera! [speaking louder] I said I can't hear you, because I'm at the opera!!"

    Everyone for rows around was glaring at this guy. At this point, a seeming stranger next to the guy (who had been shushing him) yanked the phone from his hand and turned off, then handed it back.

    And sometimes the effect simply destroys the entire event. I was at a symphony concert a few years back where a 90-minute piece ended with a slow gradual dissolution of the music, gradually getting softer and softer, fading away over a period of some 10 minutes. (Some people may find such a thing boring, others sublime, but obviously most people at such a concert probably are closer to the latter.)

    Most people here had probably paid at least 10 times what a movie ticket costs... a couple thousand people in the hall. For the last few minutes of the concert, you could have heard a pin drop (almost literally).

    About 3 minutes before the end of the piece, a cell phone starts going off loudly. It keeps going off -- for about a minute as a guy in the fifth row from the front or so gets up and actually works his way out of the hall (these rows were not spaced to allow people to pass while everyone was seated, so it took some time)... all the while with phone blaring.

    The concert was completely ruined for the orchestra and the entire audience -- the profound effect of the music was lost.

    This event was so notorious that it actually got written up in major newpapers. If I remember correctly, the guy actually came forward (anonymously) and apologized -- explaining that he had just received an iPhone as a gift in the past couple days, had someone else put it into "sleep" mode, had it on vibrate, but somehow had mistakenly set an alarm... which he didn't realize could sound aloud even when the phone was on vibrate or "asleep." When it sounded, he was too unfamiliar with the device to figure out how to make it stop.

    Since that event, I ALWAYS turn my phone and any other devices COMPLETELY OFF at important events. An accidental alarm or other noise just isn't worth ruining an experience for thousands of other people who may have paid hundreds of dollars each.

    A movie theater may not quite be like this, but a similar etiquette principle applies on a smaller scale.

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