Sentences with phrase «theater feeling»

Sometimes you walk out of a movie theater feeling overwhelmed with joy over the experience you've just had.
If you grew up with this story, you may leave theaters feeling rather uninspired.
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.
the final scene is really great, and the move towards a more theater feel in bergmans work is interesting, but overall not among his best.
Festooned with cute, mugging kids; lots of jazzy redos of beloved Christmas tunes on the soundtrack; and enough tug - at - your - heartstrings moments to make an entire theater feel warm on a blustery winter afternoon.
They surely won't mind the absence of the fantastical visual effects and action that most new films occupying over 3,000 theaters feel obligated to supply.
Zack Snyder's Sucker Punch hit theaters in March earlier this year, but it's road to theaters felt like watching a train hit the emergency break.
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.
One woman who saw the film said, «I left the theater feeling sick.
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!
So yeah, it's kinda slow and kinda boring but not without merit, though ultimately I left the theater feeling a bit disappointed.
I left the theater feeling good and loving the film.
You'll leave the theater feeling emotionally charged, as only the best tales (tails?)
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.
Even more so, he wants the audience to leave the theater feeling good.
I walked out of the theater feeling the same way I felt following the end credits of «Doubt.»
It tries to be arty and ambiguous, so instead of leaving the theater feeling disgusted, it provides one last opportunity for an unintentional laugh.
I still bounced out of the theater feeling cheered and energized, ready to keep fighting these greedy autocrats (tweeting is fighting, right?)
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.»
The film does end somewhat abruptly, but this is a cliffhanger in the grand tradition of The Empire Strikes Back, The Dark Knight or Harry Potter and the Half - Blood Prince (not all created equal, though they have similarly unresolved endings) and offers such an incendiary climax (literally and figuratively) that you don't leave the theater feeling hoodwinked or unfulfilled.
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.
Although I did see the original theatrical release back in 1991, with high hopes I might add, I left the theater feeling extremely disappointed.
Carney nails the tone of the film and everything from the costumes, to the dialogue and music will have you leaving the theater feeling uplifted and tapping your feet.
Still, there's an air of excitement radiating off Molly's Game, and the film ends on a truly hopeful note that'll have you walk out of the theater feeling like you just ended a poker game with a royal flush.
It's really the only explanation for the reason why the revelation in the origin doesn't jibe with what we have seen and why most might leave the theater feeling a bit unsure about the ending that Burton eventually did decide on.
It's doubtful you'll leave the theater feeling good about mankind or primates as a whole.
I left the theater feeling like this * might * have been a good movie, but I wasn't sure, because I could never quite see what was happening.
Even though Dolby is rumored to be developing a version of Atmos that can be licensed to home theater equipment manufacturers, we imagine it is probably a long way off and, while it may be possible to install a really big screen in a smaller room to mimic that theater feel at home, it would take a room of cavernous proportions to be able to accommodate an audio system that could do hold a candle to what Atmos can do in a properly sized auditorium.
Written by Margie Boule and directed by Jamie M. Rea, these often untold stories will evoke powerful emotions, negative and positive, and have you leaving the theater feeling hopeful, joyous, and excited, this is the play to see.
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