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Movies

posted Saturday, 14 July 2007

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I went to the movies yesterday to see the latest Harry Potter installation. Wanting to avoid a crowd, I chose the early matinee show, so I could sit wherever I wanted without feeling crowded. I was in luck; there were fewer than 10 people in the theater watching the movie with me. Because I don't want to spoil it for my readers, I won't make any comments about the movie itself, except to say that I think it was better than the last one, though not the best of them all.

Going to the movies is quite a bit different now than when I was a kid. The most obvious difference is the price. I paid $5.50 for the matinee showing; going at night would have cost a few dollars more. I remember when I was a kid, going to the matinee show was fifty cents, 75 cents to a dollar to go at night.

And we didn't have mammoth theaters with a dozen or more screening rooms. Most of the theaters I went to as a kid had only one screen, though, admittedly, there was seating for a lot more people than what is typical in today's multi-screen theaters. It was a big deal to go to a theater that had two screens back then. In the town I live in now, up until ten years ago or so, our largest theater still had only five screens. Now we have two 14 screen theaters, with a host of smaller ones in the general area. And I'm guessing that the theaters are even larger in more heavily populated areas.

We also started going to the movies without our parents at an earlier age back in the sixties. From about age ten or so, the typical pattern was for our parents to drop us off at the theater for a Saturday afternoon matinee, and then be there to pick us up when the movie was over. They got a break from us and we got to see a movie.

Our old theater had a balcony, as many theaters did then, and my friends and I always preferred to sit up there. I'd carry a bag of rubber bands in with me, then buy a large box of Raisinets at the concession. The Raisinets weren't for eating; I bought these to hurl at the audience below. Likewise, I shot the rubber bands at unsuspecting movie goers down below. I never got caught, but I saw more than one kid get thrown out of the theater for doing similar stuff.

Drive-in movies were more common back then, and my family went every so often. Some theaters had a little playground for the kids to play and it wasn't uncommon to see younger kids on the swings in their pajamas. Once the movie started, the kids would have pillows and blankets in the back seat of their parents' cars waiting for them.

I remember going to see "The Graduate" with my parents and great-aunt at the drive-in when I was ten years old. There were scenes in this movie that were considered very risque for the time -- that my parents wouldn't have wanted me to see if they'd been aware of ahead of time. Fortunately for me, however, all three adults had fallen asleep by the time those scenes were shown. But I was wide awake, and I watched the scenes with rapt attention.

When VCRs, with VHS and Beta formats, came out in the 70s, many people thought that movie theaters would quickly become a thing of the past as most people would prefer to view movies in the comfort of their own homes. Obviously, this didn't happen, partly because there was a delay on the release of new movies to VCR tapes, which was typically a year or more back then. But this isn't the whole story -- I think movie theaters survive partially because people enjoy the experience of seeing a movie in a theater and because movie-going remains popular simply for the social aspects.

Thoughts? 

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1. Paula Reed left...
Monday, 16 July 2007 9:23 am :: http://paulareed.blog-city.com

I enjoy going to the movie theatre, but I am very judicious about which movies I splurge on. A matinee in Denver will set you back $7. I never go at night; $9.25 is just too much, especially when you factor in popcorn and a soda, which I consider part of the experience. Recently, my daughter and her friends wanted to go to the movies in a group, and one girl's parents refused to allow their daughter to go if no adult was going into the theatre with them. Like you, my friends and I went alone at around age 10. These girls are 12, and there were five of them. Sheesh!


2. Liveandlearn left...
Tuesday, 17 July 2007 5:54 am :: http://liveandlearn.blog-city.com

I also enjoyed the new Harry Potter movie much better than the last one. It costs $7.00 for a matinee in Dayton, Ohio and $10.00 for the evening movie. I don't go to the movies that often, but my sister and her family go almost every other weekend.

My parents were so overprotective of me as a kid, that I never went to the movies with any of my friends. I always had to go with family.


3. JohnSherck left...
Wednesday, 18 July 2007 8:34 am :: http://wheresmyplan.blog-city.com

I saw the HP movie while I was out roughing it in the wilds of NY and was positively thrilled to pay $5.50 for a matinee, now that I've gotten used to Providence prices.

It's positively amazing to me that they can squish an 870-page hardback into movie-length. Obviously there's a lot lost in the translation, but I thought they did a pretty decent job here.

I think on the one hand, the big-screen experience is something that most of us can't mimic in our homes, and I think that keeps us coming back. As a teen, of course, you don't want to watch movies at home because you want to get out from under your parents' watchful eyes, and even as an adult there's just something nice about going "out" sometimes instead of staying in.


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