You'll laugh, you'll cry and you'll
leave the theater wanting to dive down the YouTube rabbit hole of Gilda Radner.
Being a film adaptation of a television show, I wasn't at all expecting much, but
I left the theater wanting to watch the movie again in much the same way I did after my first viewing of Olympus Has Fallen.
Said Frost: «Half the people
leave the theater wanting a pint, half leave the theater and never want to drink again.»
I left the theater wanting to watch it again, even though it is almost 3 hours long.
Not exact matches
To compete, other studios could also merge — giving us essentially a movie version of the NBA's super-team syndrome — or they could amp up efforts to infiltrate streaming,
leaving their movie studios as an output for major blockbusters that audiences still
want to watch in
theaters.
He cried because he was sad we were
leaving the
theater and he didn't
want to
leave mater at the end of the movie.
I
left work a few minutes early to meet Alison in Penn Station, and we were seeing the Hunger Games that night so we
wanted to get to the
theater extra early.
I thought the pace was good and it did not have any slow parts that
left you
wanting to
leave the
theater.
Indie Game: The Movie just doesn't hype video games or convince you to play them more (though that's all I
wanted to do upon
leaving the
theater), but it shows you the pure passion and dedication that exists from video games who are now aiming to make the games they loved to play as kids.
Related Reviews: Written and Directed by Noah Baumbach: Frances Ha • Greenberg • The Squid and the Whale • Margot at the Wedding Written by Noah Baumbach: Fantastic Mr. Fox • Madagascar 3: Europe's Most
Wanted • The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou Ben Stiller: The Royal Tenenbaums • The Heartbreak Kid Naomi Watts: St. Vincent • Adore • You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger Adam Driver: Inside Llewyn Davis • This Is Where I
Leave You Amanda Seyfried: Chloe • Lovelace • In Time • Dear John Charles Grodin: The Humbling • The Great Muppet Caper • Ishtar Now in
Theaters: Get Hard • Cinderella • Chappie Away We Go • Young Adult • Jack Goes Boating • Love Streams
For those who enjoy a unique film experience rather than simply being spoon - fed the plot or just
wanting to
leave the
theater with that warm fuzzy feeling.
You may
want to book vacation reservations upon
leaving the
theater, although the memory of this underwhelming movie may tarnish the sightseeing.
I
left the
theater in disbelief and immediately
wanting the sequel.
We know this before we even step into the
theater, and The Stanford Prison Experiment succeeds because it brings our fears to life, and while Alvarez may have
wanted to
leave his audience with a breather, his film works far better when it's making us gasp at humanity's fragile morality.
However, given the film's obnoxiously unfunny opening, Google doesn't come off like a place you might actually
want to work out until more than an hour into the story (when all but the most masochistic members of the audience will have
left the
theater to demand their money back from director Shawn Levy.)
I'm going to
leave it to readers to decide if they
want to see American Reunion in
theaters.
I really
want to rewatch Her and Gravity before they
leave the
theater, but the one I
want to see for the first time is American Hustle.
You should
leave the
theater always
wanting more.
The movie falls apart at the end as Niccol is forced to complete Egan's narrative arc, but the filmmaker doesn't
want people to
leave the
theater talking about a character.
It may not have been quite as funny as I
wanted it to be, but new year optimism is getting an early start and
leaving me hopeful that there will be plenty of funny moments
left to discover in the
theater.
And this is especially true, not only given to tough road of a musical that has no pre-established fan base, as well as one that incorporates so many jazz pieces that can't be made into pop tunes, along with a romance that doesn't actually give those who just
want a sweeping love story something to fawn over as they
leave the
theater.
When people
leave the
theater more perplexed about why something is in a movie rather than accept what the filmmakers
want, that is not a good sign.
UNTITLED FOX / MARVEL — July 13, 2018 If the Marvel Studios / Disney / LucasFilms plan is to have at least one Marvel and «Star Wars» movie in
theaters every year, 20th Century Fox does not
want to be
left behind.
It is difficult not to
leave the
theater wishing you had gotten a tad more, but the reason we
want more is rooted in the quality of what the Coens have given us.
Above all, we
want to
leave the
theater asking «what happens next?»
Futhermore, they believe that MoviePass will eventually
want to buy tickets from AMC Theatres at a discount price after the customer base has grown to a certain level,
leaving the chain with less revenue to keep their
theaters running or provide incentive to studios to keep making movies that they can play in their
theaters.