Cinema vs DVD

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
I don't feel an urge to see movies as soon as they come out. I'll wait for the DVD. I don't like cinemas, I prefer to cuddle up on the couch at home to watch movies - so many advantages.

Who's for the cinema, who's against?

Rumpy Pumpkin (rumpypumpkin), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 11:33 (twenty-two years ago)

I am ALL ABOUT the cinema. A little bit too much some might say (though I still don't see films fast enough for some people, eh Toby).

Pete (Pete), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 11:34 (twenty-two years ago)

mmm DVD

my own food at not hyperinflated prices,beer, I can lie down, I can pause to go for a wee and I'm not surrounded by people constantly talking/crunching/coughing etc

by far more preferable

chris (chris), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 11:37 (twenty-two years ago)

DVD. Where you can have s3x and not gt arrested...

mark grout (mark grout), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 11:38 (twenty-two years ago)

.. in fact, the film can get paused or rewound if you want...

mark grout (mark grout), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 11:38 (twenty-two years ago)

DVD all the mo'fuckin way. It's basically cheaper for me, since I usually have to travel to London to see films. And for the obvious red wine consumption/slash-taking possbilities.

Enrique (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 11:50 (twenty-two years ago)

The other people factor really pisses me off. Perhaps a private screening would suit better.

Rumpy Pumpkin (rumpypumpkin), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 11:51 (twenty-two years ago)

DVD sucks with regards to how little it is fulfilling it's true potential. i am however all for hi-speed downloading of movies and storing them on an enormous server in your house at MPEG4 or higher and not having to bother with these silly discs anymore.

stevem (blueski), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:06 (twenty-two years ago)

I like seeing films with audiences, it raises the excitement level, the communal aspect of culture. I like going out and I don't eat in the cinema anyway, that's what mealtimes are for. Going to the cinema is one of the ways I avoid going to the pub. But for picture and sound quality and having no distractions, you cannot beat the cine.

Pete (Pete), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:20 (twenty-two years ago)

i dunno, sometimes the communal aspect is bad, chattering self-centred drunkards etc. - i do enjoy the cinema experience generally tho. have you been to the Tuschinskitheater in Amsterdam Pete?

stevem (blueski), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:22 (twenty-two years ago)

This thread is extremely telling anthropologically. The vote is running about 80% against going to the movies. This tells us that the future of cool lies not with ILXors (perhaps this is not news), and to the extent they reflect society at large, not with the human race. Nothing is more banal than staying at home and watching TV.

Skottie, Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:26 (twenty-two years ago)

I do like seeing popular films w/ audiences, but with art-house crowds everybode's so quiet and respectful it doesn't make any odds. The audience's love for the vile 'Barbarian Invasions' was part of what made me walk out.

I think in a wider sense you can never get as lost in a film on DVD as you can in the cinema; it really changes things like character identification.

A lot of DVDs are up to their potential, but I never have time to go into all that anyway. Mine cost £30 quid and it plays R1!

Enrique (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:31 (twenty-two years ago)

e.g. "Bruce Almighty" outtakes = Jim Carey mugging in scenes that didn't make the film anyway...

mark grout (mark grout), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:33 (twenty-two years ago)

I am deep in a long piece about DVD extras. Erm, so nothing to add, except I really hate the DVDs where they use sound samples to introduce new screens, ie on 'Spaced' series 1. It gets vey vey 'noying.

Enrique (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:35 (twenty-two years ago)

Oh sometimes it makes no odds (and I had a very odd experience watching Secret Window in the Vue Isligton two weeks ago where I was on my own and some bloke walked in halfway, ates a sandwich and walked out). And I know I am not always seeing the film in its best light. But I equally find myself really easily distracted at home and really not giving the film the kind of chance I do in the cinema.

Pete (Pete), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:40 (twenty-two years ago)

I often get the fear in the cinema. Like worrying a fight will break out if so and so doesn't shut the hell up.

stevem (blueski), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:41 (twenty-two years ago)

I often start those fights. I enjoy living dangerously.

Pete (Pete), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:45 (twenty-two years ago)

Haha, I saw Dogville in an enormous new multiplex just outside Oxford. No-one goes there even at the weekend, and this was 2pm on a Tuesday. I had the exquisite joy of being the only person in the car-fresh cinema for a long time.

People were tossing off when I saw 'Baise-Moi'. *That's* audience participation.

Enrique (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:46 (twenty-two years ago)

> But for picture and sound quality...

like van helsing? 8)

koogs (koogs), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:47 (twenty-two years ago)

Point taken. Ha!

Pete (Pete), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:51 (twenty-two years ago)

sci fi/action at the cinema. dvd for most everything else. early saturday shows are a great time to get the big screen without the noisy crowd.
but seeing the creature double feature at the drive-in is still my favorite cinema

kephm, Tuesday, 25 May 2004 12:58 (twenty-two years ago)

Actually cinemas rool, 'parently Renoir has my photo outside it hahaha.

Vain Fucking Twot (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:02 (twenty-two years ago)

'hat?

kephm, Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:04 (twenty-two years ago)

I don't ever watch television at home. I used to follow Eastenders but nowadays I seem to have turned my back on telly in favour of reading more books. When I rent a DVD I get wholly into it in a way I can't in the cinema. The proximity of other people, the strange smells, the inability to get truly comfortable all contrive to make my experience of the movie worse.

Besides, it's too expensive to eat there, you have to travel home afterwards, and you can't skin up.

Rumpy Pumpkin (rumpypumpkin), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:09 (twenty-two years ago)

DVD sucks with regards to how little it is fulfilling it's true potential. i am however all for hi-speed downloading of movies and storing them on an enormous server in your house at MPEG4 or higher and not having to bother with these silly discs anymore.

As someone with over a terabyte of online storage here at home, I couldn't agree more. :)

Andrew (enneff), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:25 (twenty-two years ago)

I decided not to buy a DVD player the other day when I realised that there was nothing out on DVD that I'd ever actually bother to watch.

I don't like the cinema either.

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:28 (twenty-two years ago)

I love me the Andrew and his ways. :-)

Anyway, in practical terms DVD over cinema -- the various price/food/idiots-around-you reasons add up all too quickly around here.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:29 (twenty-two years ago)

Dr Leavis, I presume? Not a single DVD? The entire history of cinema and TV (well, kinda) and nothing worth seeing?

Enrique (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:30 (twenty-two years ago)

:-)

I swear, my housemate and I have a hard-drive addiction. The other day we both simultaneously opened the static bags on our new 200gb drives and deeply inhaled the lovely new-hard-drive-smell.

Andrew (enneff), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:34 (twenty-two years ago)

That's not what I said at all, Enrique. I'm not saying there's nothing worth seeing, I'm saying there's nothing I'd bother to watch. I like watching television, I enjoy films on the TV. I had a huge pile of videotapes with great stuff on every single one of them. How many did I ever bother to watch? None.

And I find the cinema an unpleasant way to spend an evening.

Tim (Tim), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:38 (twenty-two years ago)

Fair play -- I've got stacks of stuff taped on the TV that never gets seen. Probably the tape will demagnetize or whatever in the meantime. DVDs are just too addictive.

Enrique (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:41 (twenty-two years ago)

The thing that I love about DVD / Mpeg4 videos are the commentaries and other special features. Often I'll watch a film and then directly afterwards watch it again with the director's commentary. With most art I find the craft just as fascinating as the end product.

Andrew (enneff), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:45 (twenty-two years ago)

there's something about seeing a print in a theater - even if it's a bad print - that I find much more appealing than any other experience involving film. I like DVDs okay, but I hardly watch the ones I own, and there aren't any good rental stores in my hood, whereas BAM Rose Cinemas are a 5 minute walk away.

hstencil (hstencil), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:47 (twenty-two years ago)

Given the choice, time, and funds, I'd always go w/ the cinema. But I just don't fit that pattern, lifestyle-wise.

Enrique (Enrique), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 13:52 (twenty-two years ago)


The thing that I love about DVD / Mpeg4 videos are the commentaries and other special features. Often I'll watch a film and then directly afterwards
watch it again with the director's commentary. With most art I find the craft just as fascinating as the end product.

I've often done this as well, though mostly I try and separate the first watching from the commentary watching by a day or two. I'm addicted to random anecdotes.

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 14:02 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm addicted to random anecdotes.

Nail on the head.

Andrew (enneff), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 14:08 (twenty-two years ago)

the only way i can watch DVDs and things like commentaries would be in bed in the mornings so i'm working on this terrabyte hard-drive so i can pile that shit up. my PC would also need a remote control tho.

stevem (blueski), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 14:09 (twenty-two years ago)

Cinema,

Advantages: Shared experience w/audience. Great for comedy & horror, less so for pr0n and romance. Big screen and full sound for full esthetic effect

Disadvantages: Audience often braying, illiterate boors barely fit for turnip fertilizer. Food expensive. Smoking, drinking, carnal gymnastics, and shutting the film down while you go the head, all verboten Expensive.

DVD,

Advantages: No chatting teenagers, mumbling crazy people or socially impaired disturbances (unless it's one and one's guests). No rustling of candy wrappers. Clothing optional. Food can be whatever you want. One can conceivably sit naked, well-fed, drunk, and otherwise under the influence on one's lving room rug in an attempt to make movie experience better. This is frowned upon in theaters, especially the bringing in your living room rug part.

Disadvantages: If epic or finely shot film, you may miss out on some of the detail and power even on your bestest screen. If movie is social phenomenon, you won't be part of it 'til after it's happened.
If movie is really shite, you won't have consolation of knowing all the other people in the audience paid and suffered too.

Michael White (Hereward), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 15:15 (twenty-two years ago)

CINEMA, by a big margin. I'm not at all in to special features, plus everything looks better on the big screen.

Near empty cinema on a week day afternoon = one of the greatest things ever.

jel -- (jel), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 16:06 (twenty-two years ago)

we are CINEMAISTS! (or cineasts?)

hstencil (hstencil), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 16:07 (twenty-two years ago)

Cinema whenever possible, the experience is just better in every way in a new stadium theater. For movies my friends wouldn't want to see I like to go Monday evenings/afternoons, so the crowds are small or nonexistent (especially if I wait a couple of weeks to see something).

I try to replicate the experience on DVD as much as possible - I hate watching films in a room that isn't dark, and I try to interrupt the film as little as possible, turn off phones, etc..

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 16:36 (twenty-two years ago)

I like that factthat I can watch a bit of a DVD, leave it for a few daysm, and watch the second half. Can't do that in a cinema. Besides, snogging in a cinema is so 20th century.

Johnney B, Tuesday, 25 May 2004 17:28 (twenty-two years ago)

Shared experience w/audience. Great for comedy & horror, less so for pr0n

I really think you're missing out on that last one. Samuel Delany to thread!

I'm a bit more pragmatic -- I want to watch it for the first time on the big screen, and then I don't mind watching it on the wee screen. Having the DVD or the file is awesome then. But if it's good I'll see it at the cinema every chance I get.

So even though on another thread I said something about wanting to see more Guy Maddin films, I probably won't actually see them unless they are shown in a theater first.

But I have been known to break this rule sometimes.

All that said, I don't see many films at all.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 18:08 (twenty-two years ago)

I'm not going to comment much on this, since I have ranted about it numerous times on other threads and boards, but:

Cinema

Girolamo Savonarola, Tuesday, 25 May 2004 22:16 (twenty-two years ago)

some things must be seen in the cinema... you miss little things on a dvd. like the fact that jeffrey beaumont has an earring in blue velvet and that when frank booth et al. get out of the car and he says "this is it," he really means it because the place is called this is it. little stuff makes the cinema great.

i do love stretching out on my couch to watch a dvd, but i would like to see the film in the cinema first.

todd swiss (eliti), Tuesday, 25 May 2004 22:22 (twenty-two years ago)

I don't have the attention span to watch a whole film on DVD. Even if it's something I really want to see, or that I loved in the cinema, I have to keep pausing to eat or check my email or read. It feels to me like watching a whole film is some kind of big commitment that I need to psych myself up for. i have no idea why.

The best way to watch a film is on your own, in an almost empty cinema in the middle of the afternoon. I did this with Lost in Translation in Coventry. I think this is actually the most fun you can have in Coventry.

kathryn m (kathryn m), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 06:35 (twenty-two years ago)

fuck stupid extras CINEMA FOREVER!!!!!!

s1ocki (slutsky), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 06:40 (twenty-two years ago)

i love you all

s1ocki (slutsky), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 06:40 (twenty-two years ago)

i watch dvds when i can't see the film on a screen, or don't expect to be able to.

in chicago, this means i watch a lot of dvds (and vhs's).

in paris, this means i almost never watched dvds.

amateur!st (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 06:56 (twenty-two years ago)

also if you're writing about a film it's INCREDIBLY useful to have it on dvd.

i don't have the reverance for the "cinema" that is evoked by people like godard ("you look 'up' at a screen in a cinema, and 'down' at a tv set"--whatever that is supposed to mean).

amateur!st (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 06:58 (twenty-two years ago)

i fall asleep in the theater ALL THE TIME. at least at home when i'm falling asleep i can stop the movie and continue later.

empty theaters are great, but that never seems to happen in chicago. in paris i sat in near-empty theaters a lot; there are simply so many movies playing so often in so many theaters, there are bound to be a few empty houses. the most commonly empty screenings were the late-night (10/11 PM) weekday ones at out-of-the-way theaters.

my point in bringing up and bashing godard was not to suggest that the experiences of watching movies on TV and in the theater are the same. just that the differences can't be---IMO--boiled down to the whole "looking up"/"looking down" formulation. i don't condescend to "ordet" when watching it on tv. i don't think i'm better than "tokyo story" when watching it on tv.

there is no platonic "DVD" and "FILM" to compare. it depends on the case. i have been to screenings where abominable prints were used, and to that i'd prefer a decent DVD transfer. of course there are mediocre DVD transfers, or worse. and of course a good-condition 35mm print, without too many splices and scractches, retaining the range and brightness of its original color or b/w, would be better than any DVD transfer (even one with low compression), but those are ideal circumstances.

amateur!st (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 17:42 (twenty-two years ago)

i am going to install fire exits in the corners of my living room.and a balcony

kephm, Wednesday, 26 May 2004 18:48 (twenty-two years ago)

most movie theaters, esp. art house ones, have chairs that are way too uncomfortable to fall asleep in.

hstencil (hstencil), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 18:49 (twenty-two years ago)

I manage it nevertheless.

Enrique (Enrique), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 18:55 (twenty-two years ago)

i have a superhuman ability to fall asleep most anywhere

amateur!st (amateurist), Wednesday, 26 May 2004 19:42 (twenty-two years ago)

Two of Dallas' art-house theaters are new (maybe five years old) and the Inwood has been remodeled with new stadium seats recently (still cramped - I'm only 6'1" and my knees touch the seat in front of me). Guess we're lucky there.

Which cities have the most art-house/revival/etc. screens and theaters in the US (aside from NYC/LA, which seem obvious)?

miloauckerman (miloauckerman), Thursday, 27 May 2004 02:05 (twenty-two years ago)

i would guess the bay area.

amateur!st (amateurist), Thursday, 27 May 2004 02:15 (twenty-two years ago)

Chicago's got a few, too.

hstencil (hstencil), Thursday, 27 May 2004 02:17 (twenty-two years ago)

unsurprisingly pete is entirely otm here. i have little to add to what he says.

Every movie I see in a semi-crowded theater will have at least one cellphone ringing, baby screaming, moron narrating the film or something equally annoying.

this just doesn't seem to happen to me! apart from at the prince charles, where it happens every time. i guess i tend not to go to films with a large teenage audience, or if i do then the times/cinemas i go to don't seem to attract loads of teenagers,a nd maybe that makes a difference. but i get way more involved with a film at the cinema than i can at home.

toby (tsg20), Thursday, 27 May 2004 05:55 (twenty-two years ago)

three years pass...

the falling asleep thing while watching dvds makes it dud for me, plus i've been lucky enough to live in cities with excellent art houses/museum screenings so just about everything old that i want to see eventually comes around. dvds are best for marginal recent stuff that might be worth a look but you can't work up any enthusiasm over

gershy, Friday, 21 March 2008 23:34 (eighteen years ago)

dvds are best for marginal recent stuff that might be worth a look but you can't work up any enthusiasm over

and tv shows.

C0L1N B..., Friday, 21 March 2008 23:35 (eighteen years ago)

wondering about this at the moment since I never got around to seeing No country for old men or There will be blood....they're either both out on DVD now or coming out soon, but still in theaters...finally have a chance to get out to see a movie...do I bother spending 10x as much for the theater experience for these? Dunno.

akm, Friday, 21 March 2008 23:37 (eighteen years ago)

i've fallen asleep in cinemas... at least on dvd you can start over. i'm going to the cinema more now than in years, but it's not really an either/or given 90% of what i see is old. there are maybe three films a month i'll bother with at the cinema.

banriquit, Friday, 21 March 2008 23:40 (eighteen years ago)

I fell asleep in the cinema watching the last Harry Potter film. I missed all but the first few minutes and the last. Er so?

DavidM, Friday, 21 March 2008 23:52 (eighteen years ago)

you missed the orgy scene

gershy, Friday, 21 March 2008 23:54 (eighteen years ago)

Doesn't really matter, does it? We'll all have to get use to home viewing sooner or later.

Eric H., Friday, 21 March 2008 23:56 (eighteen years ago)

tiickets at the curzon soho in london are now 10 pounds each

that's $20 for those of you keeping score at home

Tracer Hand, Saturday, 22 March 2008 02:07 (eighteen years ago)

sorry, i mean 12 pounds now!!! that's $24 each, $26 if you book online

Tracer Hand, Saturday, 22 March 2008 02:08 (eighteen years ago)

Akm - if you're going to see There Will Be Blood at all, see it in the cinema.

Alba, Saturday, 22 March 2008 09:14 (eighteen years ago)

Doesn't really matter, does it? We'll all have to get use to home viewing sooner or later.

Why? When?

Alba, Saturday, 22 March 2008 09:19 (eighteen years ago)

Because $26 for one ticket is beyond the reach of most people?

Tracer Hand, Saturday, 22 March 2008 12:36 (eighteen years ago)

that is a hell of a lot. i'm a student, so it's cheaper, and the curzon -- ever since the 30s -- has relied on a sizeable student audience.

but already theatrical releases, especially of curzon-type films, are loss-leaders for the dvd. a lot of films disappear after a week in central london and can't hope to recoup in that time.

banriquit, Saturday, 22 March 2008 12:39 (eighteen years ago)

Can be difficult for new releases, I can wait to borrow the dvd from my local library for 2 quid kthx (though I wish I had seen ILX fave 'Zodiac' at the cinema). 10 quid is a scandal (I think Odeon does about 6.50 for screenings before 5pm, that's where I saw 'There Will be Blood'). Thankfully Curzon (especially Renoir) does 6.50 for 'classic' arty film screenings on sunday mornings, the Lumiere can be amazing, the Goethe Institute is also awesome (3 quid for German films).

NFT does all films for fiver on tuesdays...

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 22 March 2008 12:57 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, I learned about the Tuesday NFT deal by chance the other day. It was a nice surprise.

Tracer Hand, Saturday, 22 March 2008 13:36 (eighteen years ago)

Because $26 for one ticket is beyond the reach of most people?

Most cinemas don't cost £12 (and not many think in terms of the prevailing dollar-sterling rate). I pay £12 a month to see as many films as I want at my local multiplex.

I used to like the Curzon. Perhaps I still do. I guess rich people want a place to go to watch new films away from the hoi polloi.

Alba, Saturday, 22 March 2008 14:20 (eighteen years ago)

Alba do you mean that your local multiplex has an all-you-can-watch deal, for a monthly fee? Cause that sounds like an awesome idea!

The Curzon is an extreme example I admit. The insult to the injury is how teeninsy their screens are.

Tracer Hand, Saturday, 22 March 2008 14:35 (eighteen years ago)

All Cineworlds have that deal. I can use any Cineworld in the country, except London West End ones. If you pay £15 instead of £12, it includes the West End ones too.

It's especially good for me, because the Glasgow Renfield St Cineworld is one of the biggest cinemas around, with 16 screens, and it's right next to my office, so I pop in after and before work a lot. I feel a bit bad, cause they screen a lot of arthouse stuff too, which must hit the GFT hard, but what can you do with that kind of deal? I see about 10 or 12 films a month with it.

Cineworld Unlimited

Alba, Saturday, 22 March 2008 14:56 (eighteen years ago)

Looked at that deal a few years back when Cineworld was UGC, but up here they don't show enough old/good movies to make it worth the money.

Noodle Vague, Saturday, 22 March 2008 15:02 (eighteen years ago)

Why? When?

Because DVD and internet distribution is dramatically cheaper and the decision is really in the hands of a few corporations.

C0L1N B..., Saturday, 22 March 2008 15:05 (eighteen years ago)

I guess rich people want a place to go to watch new films away from the hoi polloi.

-- Alba, Saturday, March 22, 2008 2:20 PM (58 minutes ago) Bookmark Link

lololol u just summarized my 100,000wd thesis, boo.

banriquit, Saturday, 22 March 2008 15:19 (eighteen years ago)

In the UK at least, cinema attendance is an perfectly healthy state. I think the last couple of years have seen a small drop, but it's well up on a decade ago. I don't see any signs of it being a dying distribution model.

Alba, Saturday, 22 March 2008 15:23 (eighteen years ago)

Why? When?
Because DVD and internet distribution is dramatically cheaper and the decision is really in the hands of a few corporations.

Yep. If it weren't for the spectre of Internet piracy, I'm fairly sure we'd see theaters unceremoniously being closed left and right.

Eric H., Saturday, 22 March 2008 16:15 (eighteen years ago)

I must remind Cineworld to change their "Love films, hate piracy" ads to "Love piracy, keep us open" ones.

Alba, Saturday, 22 March 2008 16:27 (eighteen years ago)

DVD advantage = no other people around, no crappy projection

cinema = everything else

Dr Morbius, Saturday, 22 March 2008 21:19 (eighteen years ago)

I like going to the movies better because it's easier to watch the movie in one sitting without getting bored and falling asleep.

freewheel, Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:18 (eighteen years ago)

Yeah, my major problem with watching films at home, on my own at least, is that I find it hard to sit and concentrate for two hours. I get distracted and go and check my email or something. Being in a cinema away from all that is just what I need.

Alba, Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:27 (eighteen years ago)

Alba, you took the popcorn right out of my mouth.

the pinefox, Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:37 (eighteen years ago)

lolololo

chaki, Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:38 (eighteen years ago)

It must have been while I was sshhing you.

Alba, Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:38 (eighteen years ago)

Films are completely different in the cinema and I love it, unfortunately so rarely do any films I care about seeing come a cinema even remotely close to me that I basically have to watch everything on dvd, when I can afford to buy them off amazon, which is basically the only way to get a lot of movies since I can only rely on Tesco/hmv to stock them

I know, right?, Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:41 (eighteen years ago)

^^^

This is pretty much the other thing to chalk down in the "DVD advantage" category, Morbs, and it's a big one -- the ability to see stuff you want to see.

Eric H., Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:51 (eighteen years ago)

the other thing about the movies is: I like going to the movies - I like the idea of going to the movies. but the Movies themselves are not very good, are they?

this year at the movies I have seen There Will Be Blood, No Country For Old Men and Juno - all acclaimed pictures, all ... really not that great. and Margot at the Wedding: not that acclaimed, and utterly awful. and yet I persist in the idea that going to the movies is fun. I guess that for me the movies are over the rainbow, they are where the grass is greener, where the rest of the world does not quite apply, one can walk away from it and out of it and into the movies - and the fact that actual movies are really not much cop does not seem to dilute this feeling much.

the pinefox, Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:52 (eighteen years ago)

I don't even remember the last thing I got to see in the cinema. It is a trek to a giant shopping centre in the middle of nowhere or nothing. Also it is like €9 a ticket which is insane, and the last thing I really wanted to see only came to dublin which is four hours by bus and the next thing is luckily coming to cork so its just two hours, which means I actually get to see it, it will take an entire day to see one movie, and cost about €30 if i don't eat and it's gotten terrible reviews, but I've been dying to see it and I so rarely get to see movies in the cinema that I will go.

I know, right?, Saturday, 22 March 2008 23:58 (eighteen years ago)

wow, what's the film?

Upt0eleven, Sunday, 23 March 2008 00:02 (eighteen years ago)

um blueberry nights, which despite having jude law in it will be worth it if it's even 1/10 as beautiful as in the mood for love/2046/happy together (whichever is the worst of these, i could never decide or anything)

I know, right?, Sunday, 23 March 2008 00:05 (eighteen years ago)

The pinefox, it's a shame you didn't see I'm Not There at the movies.

Alba, Sunday, 23 March 2008 00:05 (eighteen years ago)

I feel bad hearing I know, right's story, because I had ample chance to see My Blueberry Nights for free but didn't bother and even went to see Definitely Maybe instead.

Alba, Sunday, 23 March 2008 00:07 (eighteen years ago)

(perhaps the pinefox's list was not exhaustive and he has seen I'm Not There)

Alba, Sunday, 23 March 2008 00:08 (eighteen years ago)

I'm not there was the dublin exclusive btw

I know, right?, Sunday, 23 March 2008 00:09 (eighteen years ago)

Alba, I think it's called "Definitely, Maybe". Otherwise, we might think that you had watched a cinematic screening of the Oasis 10th anniversary box set, which Fopp are now selling off for £3.

It was thoughtful of you, Alba, to say that about I'm Not There. My list was indeed exhaustive, I think, for 2008; certainly I didn't see the Dylan picture, it was gone too fast. It was Not There! But you're correct, surely that's just the kind of film that would have salvaged my view of film, and it is indeed a pity I didn't catch it, at the movies.

the pinefox, Sunday, 23 March 2008 11:50 (eighteen years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.