Sentences with phrase «movie theater feel»

This room was well designed to give you the movie theater feel and is a great place to getaway to watch your favorite sporting event or to watch a classic movie.
It's not often that one leaves a movie theater feeling speechless, but anyone on the right side of the culture wars who views the recent film Blast from the Past will find his jaw scraping the sidewalk» and not out of disgust.

Not exact matches

In one of the scariest movies ever made, director William Friedkin uses his background as a documentary filmmaker to create horror that feels so real, some people fainted while watching the movie when it was first in theaters.
I watched Thor: The Dark World and felt like I was at a movie theater writ small.
I love watching animated movies in theaters full of children where I feel less insecure about laughing super-loud and gasping at scary scenes.
Just in case you needed to feel old, it's now been 20 years since the movie The Little Rascals hit theaters.
As soon as something happens that doesn't feel in line with the movie's imagination, you're beamed right back out into your theater seat.
My guy felt really badly for me, so the first weekend of November, he cancelled our movie theater date night, rented a cute animated DVD instead, and pulled out some nails and a sharp knife.
As I left a movie theater Sunday, all alone on the quiet city streets, I relished in the feeling of being unattached.
The theater feels like a throwback to an old school movie theater but with a modern twist — food and drinks are served during your movie!
I'm out going very easy to get along with love going to the theater - dancing - walks in the park - movies baseball games & hockey & football - traveling is a plus I love kissing and showing affection and receiving the same I love feeling wanted & needed and showing the same in return so don't...
As a movie to take a girl or guy on a date — it has one of those «make - you - feel - good endings» that will make you happy to hold hands when you leave the theater.
Seniors may not feel comfortable with a lot of children around or a lot of noise so parks, nice restaurants and movie theaters seem to be safe bets because well there are a certain type of manner expected in those places.
Manifesto was previously staged as an art installation, and in many ways it feels like its true home is the gallery rather than the movie theater.
While I saw the movie in 3D, it wasn t really that reliant on the effect, so if your local theater isn t 3D capable, don t feel bad.
After a few hours of this assault, you feel the chair melt and the floor of the movie theater becomes an angry mirror into your soul.
The result is great, as it features the two perfectly in character as seen in the Before films, but also because it plays with the fourth wall and expresses some of the vitriol that many audience members feel when someone else is being inconsiderate in a movie theater.
As you'd expect from a movie that's the first half of a book, there isn't really an ending to the movie, and it doesn't naturally end on much of a cliffhanger either, so if you walk out of the theater feeling tepid, this will likely be one of the major reasons.
That's where the urgency really picks up and it feels like a movie you have to see in the theater.
Rather than tell the story in a straightforward fashion, the movie is set in a theater, where sets and backdrops are flown in as scenes shift and characters often move to choreography that feels like it's out of a musical number.
With many popular movies, artists will use their own resources to design posters that they feel fit the movie better than the official ones that we see in theaters.
But I do remember, on first seeing and loving the movie in the theater, a sense of incompleteness about the ending, a feeling that the weight of what had come before was not quite counterbalanced by the giddy release of that final scene.
It's just an old - fashioned, feel - good movie that, if you let it, will make you appreciate the sight of a grand, timeless movie theater more than you probably should.
«I always feel like a vague failure in L.A.,» said Greta Gerwig, sitting in a movie theater in the heart of Hollywood.
Though it may feel like there's only one movie currently playing at the theater, there's actually another.
Much like Ceylan's Winter Sleep this is what a real experience feels like in the movie theater.
It's not all the necessary vulgarities, but the assumption that it will be another revenge film, much like Inglourious Basterds, where a race can achieve a feeling of vengeance from the seat of a movie theater.
Last spring, I encountered a feeling altogether new: There was a Batman movie in theaters, and I had no interest in seeing it.
As a result, the movie drags on forever and the theater begins to feel like an elevator stuck between floors with no alarm button to push.
Unless you just saw the movie in theaters and want to see it in a new way, this feels like a waste of time.
I'm being told that the «Hobbit» movies already released in theaters were not the extended editions; they just felt that way.
I can appreciate the criticisms leveled here but walking out of the theater after seeing this movie, I felt excited about films again and wonderfully engrossed by this well - told story.
You can practically feel the beating heart of the jungle in Jon Favreau's stunning adaptation of «The Jungle Book,» which is the most visually dazzling movie to hit theaters this year.
«Zootopia» is an achievement in world building - it feels as if you could walk out of the movie theater and book a trip to a land where giraffes drink acacia smoothies and an arctic shrew is the local mafia don.
Between the Oscar nominations, Sundance, leftover films from the previous year going into wide release, and the lack of anything good to see otherwise in theaters, January can always feel a bit stop - start in the movie world.
Before the film started, director Adam Wingard and writer Simon Barrett introduced You're Next to the crowded theater by saying up front «We made this movie with the purpose of not making you feel like a horrible person when it ends.
As fitting as it might've been to have the first Marvel Cinematic Universe movie about a black hero in theaters while the first black commander in chief was in office, Narcisse feels it wouldn't have conjured the same kind of pop - cultural moment.
I didn't hate this movie, but I felt tired walking out of the theater.
Feel free to leave the theater and then go back to see the movie once again.
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.
My feeling is that the cast makes a terrible script feel somewhat coherent and emotionally grounded, and for that the unlucky few who actually see this movie in a theater should be thankful.
That's the way I feel about Matthew Vaughn's «X-Men: First Class,» and I only grudgingly went with the slightly positive, because I walked out of the theater feeling like I had just watched an okay superhero movie.
Theodore Melfi's comedy is nowhere the artistic product as are most of the Blu - rays in this week's packed HECG but I can't help but feel the movie got a bit of a bum rap when it was released in theaters.
Wes Anderson movies are special because without fail they always feel refreshingly different from anything else in theaters.
But when I walked out of the theater after a press screening in October, my dominant feeling about the movie was one of rage, and not even about the film's most obvious targets for that emotion.
But while loads of folks really loved the movie, making it a relatively successful documentary while in theaters, I unfortunately found it to be nothing more than an overly long and tedious documentary that made me feel a tinge of guilt for not fully appreciating its apparent significance.
The newest American crime thriller and cop drama to hit theaters, «Triple 9», is a movie that packs an attractive star studded cast, features intense action and has most of the right elements to make it at least a mediocre genre piece, but it also presents a story that is unfocused and sometimes unclear with feeling that it's incomplete or missing something.
At its core, Coogler's film feels like a love letter to every black person who will step into the movie theater to see it, be they be of American or African descent.
What's a disappointment is how surprisingly tame the comedy feels and how conventional the movie feels as a whole, but if it's simple, off - the - wall entertainment you're after, you're going to leave the theater mighty happy.
The stunning, cinematic style feels like an homage to sci - fi films past, but within the four walls of the laboratory or Elisa's apartment above a movie theater is a mismatched story with gratuitous nudity and gruesome visuals.
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