Why are cinemas good




















Movies are better with two, which is why only comparethemarket. Qualifying purchase required. Tuesdays or Wednesdays, participating cinemas. Standard tickets only, cheapest ticket free. Conditions apply. Follow us. Terms Privacy Policy. Part of HuffPost Entertainment. All rights reserved. Suggest a correction. If you wanted to see a film, you had to go to the place where the film was playing.

Eventually, technological advances brought new options for at-home entertainment. And as they changed and evolved, so too did the reasons to venture out. If you loved Titanic when it came out in and wanted to see it again before its arrival on home video — on not one but two VHS tapes, nine months after its theatrical premiere — you had to go to the theater. Even as DVDs and then Blu-rays became commonplace, and streaming services arrived in the late aughts, the reasons for going to a movie theater remained about the same.

It was something to do. Going to the movies was fun and relatively cheap. A movie theater was a good place to go on a date or with someone you wanted to date.

There were blockbuster releases and goofy comedies and horror movies to see. For a whole lot of people, movie theaters were knit into our lives. What about in ? Why go to movie theaters in a post-pandemic world? I talked to folks from all kinds of backgrounds across the US and the UK to try to answer this question, and I got a bunch of different responses. But what most people told me, after a year of watching movies only at home, is that they go to theaters for three reasons. One, they want to be around other people.

The danger of being around other people is the whole reason movie theaters were shut down in the first place. But seeing a film as part of an audience is part of what makes the moviegoing experience so fun. He lives in the Seattle area. That is what I most look forward to in returning after vaccination. Forget about it. At the theater, you're really getting bags of edible gold.

Edible, mouth-watering gold. The presence of other people adds to the experience. Oh sure, other people can be downright annoying, especially when they feel the need to explain the most obvious of on-screen actions to one another "He's going to put on the Iron Man suit now!

Such knuckleheads are, I believe, rare. For the most part, sharing the movie-watching experience with others only adds to the fun. Comedies are funnier when a hundred people are laughing together. Horror movies are scarier when everyone screams in unison.

Tear-jerkers are more emotional when you're a grown man trying hard to hold the tears back so that the macho dude sitting with his family two seats down from you doesn't see you blubbering when Dumbledore dies at the end of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Not that anything like that has ever happened to me. Lobbies are cool. Walk into the lobby of any multiplex and what do you see? Posters on the walls, banners hanging from the ceiling, enormous cardboard cutouts all over the place, and multi-colored neon shining from every available surface.

Unless you have the world's most awesome house, you can only find this kind of get-you-in-the-mood adrenaline rush from a movie theater. Seriously, I go to the movies half an hour early, just so I can hang out in the lobby for a while.

I'm a cautious advocate of the digital 3-D phenomenon. Anonymous After living in Africa all of my working life, one of the great pleasures of being retired in the UK has been the ability to go to the cinema frequently and see a wide variety of new releases. I find watching films can be intellectually stimulating, sometimes informative, other times inspiring. Most of that is not lost when I watch a film at home, so although there are many reasons I would choose to go to the cinema rather than watch a film at home, I do not feel the loss of cinemas by any means equates with the loss of film watching.

So I understand why cinemas were struggling even before the pandemic. She has also been told that job losses are inevitable. I think when these big blockbusters like the new James Bond finally open cinemagoers should boycott them. The greed of the studios in delaying releases and prompting cinemas to close has caused financial hardship for thousands of families.

Without cinema there will be no film industry. Stephen Woods, 53, property developer, London When schools and cinemas reopened, I felt we were coming out of lockdown. For me, the movies are a release, where I go to switch off from the problems of the world. I choose the front row so as not to be disturbed by anyone and typically go during the day when screens are quieter. When the doors were still open, it was a reminder of a time before the pandemic, perhaps akin to the classical concerts put on during wartime.

Cinema brings hope, inspires and opens our minds in a way laptops cannot. Cineworld was my lifeline for four years, as I supported my partner through a long depression.



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