Sentences with phrase «walking out of the theater»

Did I walk out of the theater a believer?
Walking out of the theater, my friend in the screening immediately declared that the film was the most tone - deaf film he has seen this year.
When I walked out of the theater, I was calm, cool, and collected.
That night, I walked out of the theater more confident than when I walked in, more sure of myself and my own sobriety.
As soon as we walked out of the theater they started asking about «Atom» action figures.
ending made me we want to puke — the only thing that kept me from walking out of the theater was just wanting to see if it could possibly get any worse (it did).
I know the trailer didn't have to deal with the movie itself, but after walking out of the theater and thinking about the trailer I got a little frustrated.
Did you walk out of the theater scratching your head after watching Upstream Color, the new movie from Primer director Shane Carruth?
Everybody loved the irreverent camp of Thor: Ragnarok, for example, whereas I literally walked out of the theater after 20 long minutes.
I thought the second movie was a great visual effects film if you wanted to see robots beating the crap out of each other, but overall it was so poorly executed that I actually wanted to walk out of the theater and I almost did.
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.
Things get a little more bearable after the first act (which is so violently unpleasant that I really considered walking out of the theater and just accepting my losses), but The Bronze never approaches anything close to «watchable».
I predict that the audience members who see the film a second time will outnumber the moviegoers who walk out of the theater in disgust, but not by much.
However, if you are familiar with those movies, maybe you walked out of the theater with a question.
From very early on, I wanted to walk out of the theater, but I couldn't.
While the Warner Bros. comedy tripled its budget at the box office, it will only be remembered for being one of Sandler's worst comedies yet, providing audiences didn't immediately wipe it from their memory when they walked out of the theater.
Take all of these missed thematic opportunities, throw in a plot setup that's been rehashed too many times to count (criminals on death row given a chance to fight for their freedom to the delight of millions of viewers), and let Neveldine and Taylor toss in every stylistic flourish they've ever imagined, and there is really no end to the brain - drain until one walks out of the theater.
Well, I can honestly say that I walked out of the theater having laughed out loud a few times, and not feeling that I'd wasted seven bucks.
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.
The tagline for The Benchwarmers reads, «It's never too late to take a stand», and if it were up to me, I'd add,»... and walk out of the theater» to the end of it.
It's comical in its own way due to the irony of the writing, Anderson's own twisted sense of humor and Phoenix's ability to literally fall all over the place keep you from walking out of the theater, but just barely.
That goes true for music in movies, as well, because earlier this summer, after walking out of the theater for Jersey Boys, I could not stop listening to Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons.
There were a couple cheesy parts, but I was extremely pleased walking out of the theater.
If you're like us, you might have walked out of the theater with many more questions than you had before, eager to find out if the answers will be found in next year's untitled Avengers 4.
Perhaps the most widely polarizing film in recent memory, Kill List, a kitchen - sink drama meets surreal cult horror hybrid, confirmed at least one thing for everyone who walked out of the theater, both awed and annoyed alike: Whether for good or for ill, Ben Wheatley is one of Britain's most interesting contemporary filmmakers.
Overall there were some decent moments but nothing that made this movie memorable, and that's what I want when I walk out of a theater.
What doesn't: At 2 1/2 hours long, it's a touch bloated, and more than a few audience members may walk out of the theater with a touch of Depp fatigue.
I didn't hate this movie, but I felt tired walking out of the theater.
Man I saw Hard Eight and I walked out of the theater, it was a screening, and I said, «Dude if you want to direct the Yellow Pages count me in».
The portrayal is so detailed and nuanced that walking out of the theater after seeing the film, the following question was on the top of my mind: Who does Lucy Punch know that is just like her character Amy Squirrel?
After watching Abderrahmane Sissako's stunning ensemble piece Timbuktu, the general feeling people walking out of the theater was one of deflation.
It's a film that could have easily broken my heart (and indeed I was prepared for it to do so), but I walked out of that theater knowing I had just experienced the best cinematic rendition of my beloved X-Men that I was ever going to get.
Clocking in at around 10 minutes long, the much - anticipated face - off is so worth the wait that you could walk out of the theater right after and not miss a single thing.
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.
So bad I walked out of the theater 30 minutes later... yeah, that bad.
While THE CONJURING is obviously working some kind of magic on a large percentage of viewers I personally found this utterly predictable throwback to «70s horror cinema so clichéd, schmaltzy, devoid of compelling characters, lacking in atmosphere and flat out boring that I almost walked out of the theater midway through the movie.
Three Billboards is a horrifically flawed movie, but McDormand's performance is so vitriolic and intense that most of the movie's issues didn't quite dawn on me until I'd walked out of the theater — I was carried away by just watching her crucify the motherfuckers.
It contrasts well with the darker stuff, and audiences will walk out of the theater quoting the lines.
Prolonged sequences (yes plural) of rape had many women walking out of my theater.
Depending on the title and your level of preparation, you may walk out of the theater feeling intoxicated, ravished and not a little bit baffled.
But if you're willing to surrender to his singular vision, you might just walk out of the theater seeing the world in a new way — which is probably more than you can expect from the new Kevin Hart comedy.
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.
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.
I have seen a lot of bad movies recently so my praise may be a bit overzealous, but I was extremely happy walking out of the theater.
So even if blood and guts is not really your thing, if you see this film, they'll probably be what you remember most when you're walking out of the theater.
Perhaps You're Next is a movie where it is best to not think too much and just go with it, walk out of the theater and, more than likely, just forget it.
I walked out of the theater being mixed, on the one hand Russia action director Timur Bekmambetov channels his inner Woo to bring us some amazing action sequences on the other the acting is all over the place.
We didn't need to know then - otherwise you have just another Hostel Part II - and thank God the Coens stuckc to their guns and didn't pander to the movie companies out there whose only goal is to make as much money as possible from the droves of people who forget what they saw the minute they walk out of theater, but insist that they had been entertained.
I went into John Wick: Chapter 2 expecting to be amazed with the fight scenes (which I was), but I has not anticipated that I would walk out of the theater talking about the worldbuilding of this new film.
By the end of Avengers: Infinity War, it's almost hard to get your mind around everything you've seen — to the point where you may start planning your next screening as you walk out of the theater.
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