Sentences with phrase «left theater»

About a half hour ago he left the theater in the middle of the movie because he said he needed to grab something he'd left in my car, but he never returned.
When I saw Mad Max Fury Road last year, I left the theater exhilarated.
She left the theater convinced that our schools face clear problems that have some clear solutions.
You couldn't write a fictional script with more affecting characters or lead actors whose dedication, courage, wisdom, and openness stay with you hours after you've left the theater.
I left the theater wanting to watch it again, even though it is almost 3 hours long.
If a wise audience member left the theater to go get popcorn, a soda, make a pot roast and give birth to triplets, they would return during the same racing sequence.
My heart was racing as I left the theater, and I can't stop thinking about it.
«Twister» is a THX - plus - FX popcorn movie of the highest caliber, but one that falls into the «Chinese meal» theory of moviegoing, i.e. an hour after you've left the theater talking about how awesome the film was, you realize, «Wait a minute, that movie was dumb as hell,» but, ha - ha, too late, you already liked it.
Rather than the passive lethargy that political cinema often inculcates in viewers by providing them with deceptively simple answers to often extremely nuanced questions, The Party forces its audience to continue grappling with these vital issues long after they've left the theater.
«While the lush 3D location shots of a desolate Moscow are admittedly stunning, the forgettable characters and paint - by - the - numbers plot threaten to burn the entire film out of your brain mere seconds after you've left the theater,» says Daley before joking, «Remove the sporadic alien attacks and «The Darkest Hour «suddenly feels like a Sunday night slideshow of your parents» summer tour of the Motherland.»
And, while this sort of movie isn't really for me (and my particular tastes), I left the theater supremely satisfied with a «family» film I just wasn't sure I'd enjoy.
I left the theater finding nothing to hold onto.
Had to say I left the theater disappointed.
I left the theater entertained but also wondering what it is this film is trying to say about its very tricky subject matter.
After viewing Star Wars: The Force Awakens this weekend, many fans left the theater curious and excited about the future of the franchise and where the filmmakers will take the story next.
Sadie's a movie that sits in your stomach long after you've left the theater, as an uneasy calmness washes over you, courtesy of its unfeeling main character.
But I'm satisfied with what was made and I left the theater more than curious about what from the story was left out of the movie.
(In last year's superb Sundance winner, Like Crazy, a similarly conflicted pair of on - again, off - again Anglo - American lovebirds were allowed to have rebound romances that were as complex and plausible as their own, so that we left the theater wondering if the characters might not have been better off staying with those people rather than reuniting.)
That being said, I left the the theater from my screening of RED 2 not really excited anymore.
Are you suggesting that his ideas detonate later, after we've left the theater?
After I left the theater I came up with solid answers.
I actually left the theater emotionless.
If you left the theater when the movie ended, you missed out on some of the movie's most hysterical jokes.
By the time I left the theater, I had to admit my afternoon with The Smurfs, went better than I imagined it would.
I THOROUGHLY enjoyed «Cold Comfort Farm» when I watched it, but the minute I left the theater I remembered nothing about it.
Although I did see the original theatrical release back in 1991, with high hopes I might add, I left the theater feeling extremely disappointed.
If you left the theater over the weekend thinking, «Where were Ant - Man and the Wasp during Infinity War?»
Motherhood is portrayed as many childless people like me envision, an absolute misery of an existence (I left the theater thinking thank god I don't have kids).
Day two of our 2017 Year in Film is all about those moments that stick with you long after you've left the theater.
When I first left the theater, I initially thought I was just being a harsh critic (as I feel I always am with movies), especially considering I was watching it at 12:25 the night of its release.
Yet I left the theater with admiration for all those elements that make a movie worth seeing: the lush cinematography (Dan Laustsen), the makeup and special effects that bring the creature to vivid life, the vibrant score by Alexandre Desplat and the performances (especially Hawkins, Jenkins, Spencer and Jones).
I would have liked to have seen a little more tension build up between Brolin's character and Steinfeld, but I left the theater feeling something I rarely did in 2010... «enjoyment.»
I was buzzing when I left the theater.
«We've brought together a group of our favorite developers to bring content inspired by «Ready Player One» to life in a way that resonates with audiences long after they have left the theater
I must admit, I wasn't expecting much from Smart People, but left the theater with a large grin in hand.
Yes, I got goosebumps upon hearing those famous notes and also left the theater with a smile on my face.
That same one can be forgiven if one had expected more from Trey Parker and Matt Stone, those deliciously subversive elves who nail popular culture in all its absurdist splendor on their television show, «South Park», and who had us all humming «Blame Canada» as we left the theater after seeing the film version, suggestively, but correctly subtitled: BIGGER LONGER & UNCUT.
Reaction to the movie afterward was mostly positive, though, given the subject matter and its stark presentation, there was naturally not a whole lot of ebullient conversation as members left the theater.
My kids actually left the theater sad.
As I left the theater, I found the movie to be dizzying and frustrating, though I liked many scenes more upon reflection than when I was watching them.
Unfortunately myself and my family left the theater disappointed.
Also, like many people I left the theater on December 15th of 2017 with... well with mixed emotions.
After seeing the trailer for John Krasinski's phenomenal A Quiet Place, I muted commercials, left theater seats for previews and closed online ads.
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 know a couple of people who left the theater because the shakey cam was nausea inducing.
I'm fairly sure no one left the theater with dry eyes.
When Cooper took a print of the film to Austin, Texas to screen it for Kristofferson, the actor / musician abruptly left the theater when the credits rolled.
In fact, I left the theater still trying to digest all the info.
I left the theater really angry and wondering what the f just happened.
Instead, I left the theater saying «yup.
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