I don't know where the hell you people live, but the last time I had a bad theater experience it was at the Dollar Cinema in Muncie, Indiana. Going to a nice theater there, I had no problems at all. Clean, well-kept, quiet, no cell phones or crying babies or heckling.
Movie theaters in New Jersey are pretty damn nice, too. The multiplex in Chelsea (Manhattan) is super fucking nice, too. Really, I don't know where all these horrible theaters are. Maybe you guys live in shitty towns that have only one theater, and the owner doesn't give a fuck about it. I don't think it's representative.
Basically, it's the urban-area multiplexes that rake in the big bucks, and from what I've seen they're kept very nice and don't have the problems that most of you are complaining about.
Theaters aren't going anywhere unless projectors, sound systems, and the like come way down in price. Reproducing that experience at home just isn't cheap, and I suspect it would probably cost more than you'd ever actually spend going to the theater in your lifetime.
The only thing hurting theaters right now is new releases hitting BitTorrent. Here's a clue: if the movie sucks ass, word will get out and the box office will suffer. The days of dumping a movie into the multiplex and hoping for the best are done. Now, you really can "try before you buy." I have no doubt that sort of downloading is cutting into sales, but it's not because people want something for nothing, it's because they don't want to pay for garbage.
Movie theaters in New Jersey are pretty damn nice, too. The multiplex in Chelsea (Manhattan) is super fucking nice, too. Really, I don't know where all these horrible theaters are. Maybe you guys live in shitty towns that have only one theater, and the owner doesn't give a fuck about it. I don't think it's representative.
Basically, it's the urban-area multiplexes that rake in the big bucks, and from what I've seen they're kept very nice and don't have the problems that most of you are complaining about.
Theaters aren't going anywhere unless projectors, sound systems, and the like come way down in price. Reproducing that experience at home just isn't cheap, and I suspect it would probably cost more than you'd ever actually spend going to the theater in your lifetime.
The only thing hurting theaters right now is new releases hitting BitTorrent. Here's a clue: if the movie sucks ass, word will get out and the box office will suffer. The days of dumping a movie into the multiplex and hoping for the best are done. Now, you really can "try before you buy." I have no doubt that sort of downloading is cutting into sales, but it's not because people want something for nothing, it's because they don't want to pay for garbage.