Worst theater experience

Summer Wars: There was a row of kids around seven or eight in front of me. They waved their hands in the air and whispered to each other and then giggled to pants-wetting point. Summer Wars is a great film, but I kept hearing their whispering and giggling over the film. The leader must have got after them because it stopped about half-way through the film.

Yu-Gi-Oh! 3D: Bonds Beyond Time: A bunch of kids and parents were glaring at me for being 15 and alone at a movie for kids.
 
Inception. Not because of the movie mind you, but because 25 minutes in, the theatre's power straight up DIED. Apparently the heat caused a power failure so after 20 minutes of waiting, we were all given vouchers for another show and sent home.
 
This happens a lot with me; Michel Jackson's This is It, Revenge of the Fallen, TRON: Legacy, Percy Jackson, people (myself included) often have bad habits. And they don't stop it at all.

With Michel Jackson and several other films I've seen, there's people talking. With Toy Story 2, it's having to use the bathroom and missing part of the film. With Revenge of The Fallen, both Iron Man films and Up (Amongst others), it's people kicking my seat back (or using the back of my seat to stretch their legs). Possibly the worse two experiences were these:

Percy Jackson: I almost got kicked out because of one of my habits involving my nose. The person that took me to see said film almost sent me home because of my acting out towards it. We ended up staying and missing about a minute of the film.

Robots: The Theater experience itself was okay (aside from me and my mother, only people there were three other girls and the projectionist) But I had some milk duds that didn't agree with me and thus spent about 45 minutes on the toilet because of it (It was after the movie was finished BTW).
 
Suprisingly, I've never had a bad theater experience, perhaps because I have the ability to completely tune background noise out whenever something really has my attention. However, my dad did have a bad experience when he went to see X-Men Origins: Wolverine: he said that the theater sound was turned down so low that he could barely hear anything.

Man though, some of the stories you guys are sharing sound absoutely horrifying. It's sad that so many people in this country simply don't have any good theater etiquette (or any other etiquette, for that matter). :sweat:
 
Man though, some of the stories you guys are sharing sound absoutely horrifying. It's sad that so many people in this country simply don't have any good theater etiquette (or any other etiquette, for that matter). :sweat:

I've often wondered if it has anything to do with the rise of home video in the 1980s. Sure, there were probably rude people in theaters back in the old days, but you didn't have cell phones then, either, not to mention a generation of children who've grown up with the ability to watch movies at home anytime they want, and often don't get that watching a movie in a theater is not like watching it at home.

I should talk, because the VCR became widespread when I was young, but I had parents who wouldn't tolerate kids acting up, and I knew going to see a movie in the theater was a treat, not to mention I wanted to see the dang movie.
 
I actually started this discussion back in 2003, so I'll just do a copy-and-paste job.

1. I saw Sister Act with some family and relatives as a group thing (yuck). We were all forced to take the seats all the way up front.

2. Same as above, but with Home Alone 2 when I went to see it with my cousin, and her brother's then-girlfriend's daughter. It was also on the day after the movie was released.

3. I went to see Scream 3 with my buddy, but he wanted us to stop at McDonald's for some apple pies before he went. We could have gone through the drive-thru since it's quick and easy, but the dude insisted in going inside to wait on a line. So I'm waiting and waiting and waiting in my car, and he finally returns. When we got to the theater, it was packed and we had to sit in the third row from the front. *sigh*

4. I went to see Road Trip with a friend. I like to eat snacks while I watch movies, but neither of us had enough money on us for snacks. I ended up having to leave the theater to find stores that might have ATMs, since it didn't look like the theater had one itself. I even asked for directions but got all turned around, and gave up since I figured I was missing too much of the movie as it is. So my friend and I have to watch the movie with nothing to eat. Then, when the movie is over, and we're leaving, I spot an ATM machine somewhere in the theater where I never thought of looking. Murphy's Law sucks. With teeth.

5. I don't think it would probably count for a bad movie-going experience, considering it's really a dilemma that prevented me from seeing a movie. See, one night, I was going to go see Scary Movie with some friends. We were going to pick up this other guy to take with us, since he lives closer to that theater. Then, we get a call from him, saying that there's a gang shooting going on in front of the theater, so that made it unsafe for us to go. We checked other theaters' show times, but they weren't good enough. *sigh* Innocent people just want to do something productive with their Friday nights, and a bunch of jerks have to go screw it up by having a shootout. I think I'm a bit ashamed to say something like that happened where I lived.

6. I went to see Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets back in November. Of course there are going to be a lot of kids there, and they just cannot shut up. Every five minutes some brat has to make a comment that the whole movie theater can hear, loud and clear. Then they have to be shushed.

Now here's what takes the cake.

A crying baby, crying for about 20 minutes. The baby's stupid mother doesn't have the decency to take it out of the theater and calm it down. Then, she can come back in. How obnoxious is that? All she does is go "shhh" to the baby as though it would understand her. What an idiot. Then after a while, someone suggests to her TWICE, that she should take the baby out of the theater. She didn't seem to care.


It looks like I saved the best for last.
 
Waiting like 3 hours to see X-Men 3 and like three different theater changes because the staff had no idea what was wrong with the film. The movie was not worth the extra 3 hour wait.

There was also that crap with the BTTF anniversary showing where we waited like 3 hours and didn't even get to see the movie, but since we got a full refund and free passes (and that cool poster), it wasn't anywhere near as bad as the X-Men experience.
 
Jackass 3.

Thirty minutes toward the end of the film, this group of teenagers comes in. There aren't enough seats left, so they sit in the empty few next to me and my friends. This girl next to me is sitting on her boyfriend's lap, but they both want to see the screen, so the upper half of her body is leaning into my personal space. I tolerate this and their nonstop talking for about fifteen minutes.

As time goes by, she starts leaning further and further into my seat. Eventually, I politely ask her to move over after one of my friends sees what's going on and asks me to just say something to her about it. Her response? "How about you and your (expletive) friends move so I can sit the (expletive) down in a seat already?"

Taken aback a bit, I suddenly let loose a response that would get me banned from this forum in a heartbeat without even thinking. She and her boyfriend both immediately get up and stand in front of me, and my two friends also get up and face them.

Before anything ugly went down, a bunch of ushers come in and demand the group to leave for sneaking into the movie in the first place. I guess someone reported them.

Probably the closest I've gotten to a fist fight outside of grade school.
 
Hellboy: little kid again, about 8 years old, in a PG-13 movie. He couldn't read the opening credits/intro text so his mother read it out loud for him.

Shouldn't an eight-year-old be able to read? :confused:

Daredevil: I was sitting in an empty theatre waiting for the movie to start when three yaking teenage girls entered and sat right in front of me.The whole place was empty, and they sit right in my face.

I hate people who do this. :mad: It's like, there are 300 seats in here, do you need to sit right next to me if the auditorium is nearly empty?! I always sit as far away from other people as I possibly can if the theater is sparsely-populated.
 
With Toy Story 2, it's having to use the bathroom and missing part of the film.

This is why, on any day I'm planning to see a movie, I eat and drink nothing in the morning and don't buy any popcorn/soda during the film (in addition to the snacks being more expensive than the darn ticket :mad:). Even if the movie is only eighty-five minutes long, I take no chances. I may be ravenously hungry by the time the movie lets out, but at least I don't have that excruciating experience where I'm trying to enjoy the movie, but my bladder is throbbing for the last two or three reels (happened to me with the first Pirates Of The Caribbean movie...I seriously started needing to hit the restroom with nearly forty-five minutes of screentime left to go :eek:).
 
I've had the standard experiences that everyone else has been describing such as loud kids and adults, bad air conditioning, etc. I remember I had stale popcorn once. Nasty. But, I do have one experience that stands out. It was my sixth birthday party, and we were going to see Toy Story 2. So there we are, a whole bunch of kids who are Toy Story fanatics and we're hyped as hell to see part 2. So the time starts, and they... play the wrong movie. Gets better. They played Deuce Bigelow: Male Gigolo. You know, that R-rated Rob Schneider comedy that is NOT for six year olds? And they didn't take it off immediately, we were watching it for ten minutes before they yanked it and put on TS2. Quite an experience, I remember we complained to the theatre, and they gave us gift certificates as an apology. Um... thanks.:sweat:
 
I've had the standard experiences that everyone else has been describing such as loud kids and adults, bad air conditioning, etc. I remember I had stale popcorn once. Nasty. But, I do have one experience that stands out. It was my sixth birthday party, and we were going to see Toy Story 2. So there we are, a whole bunch of kids who are Toy Story fanatics and we're hyped as hell to see part 2. So the time starts, and they... play the wrong movie. Gets better. They played Deuce Bigelow: Male Gigolo. You know, that R-rated Rob Schneider comedy that is NOT for six year olds? And they didn't take it off immediately, we were watching it for ten minutes before they yanked it and put on TS2. Quite an experience, I remember we complained to the theatre, and they gave us gift certificates as an apology. Um... thanks.:sweat:

lol yikes, i can pic you and the other kids being really mad and throwing popcorn all over the place. I remember it happen to me too since i remember that my school was giving us tickets to watch a movie of some cartoon movie based on bears and went with my brother to see it, instead of showing that movie they where showing "Demolition Man" instead, i was a bit confused at first when i was watching it but at the same time i wasn't complaining and neither as the folks that are watching the movie and i actually enjoyed it, i believe since the movie that we supposed to watched wasn't like Toy Story or something big that kids get really hype about, i was like 9 or 10 that time.
 
I've had the standard experiences that everyone else has been describing such as loud kids and adults, bad air conditioning, etc. I remember I had stale popcorn once. Nasty. But, I do have one experience that stands out. It was my sixth birthday party, and we were going to see Toy Story 2. So there we are, a whole bunch of kids who are Toy Story fanatics and we're hyped as hell to see part 2. So the time starts, and they... play the wrong movie. Gets better. They played Deuce Bigelow: Male Gigolo. You know, that R-rated Rob Schneider comedy that is NOT for six year olds? And they didn't take it off immediately, we were watching it for ten minutes before they yanked it and put on TS2. Quite an experience, I remember we complained to the theatre, and they gave us gift certificates as an apology. Um... thanks.:sweat:

It sounds like you were a victim of one of Tyler Durden's antics :D.
 
Cobbling together some I had forgotten but were int he old thread, and adding some new ones.

- I had to apologize to a buddy of mine's mom who paid for us all to see CONGO. It stands as the defining line for " teh suck" for me. NOTHING I've seen has topped Congo in sheer crappiness.

Not even Bruce Campbell could save that flick



- I went to see the X-files movie the Father's day of the year it came out. 10 minutes to the end of the movie the film burned. It was cool cause we got our money back AND THEN snuck into Mulan. We had to rent the movie the night of the season premier to see the last 10 minutes, since it was integral to the show.


- I took my younger brothers to see the first Pokemon movie on a national day off of school (the y did that on purpose y'know) . I had seen a bootleg of Pikachu's vacation before but I was really into seeing the whole Mewtwo thing. Well anyway, my mistake for going to see a Pokemon movie in the middle of the day on a day off of school with EVERY OTHER kid in Miami apparently at the same theatre. not only that but there were like 3 year olds in front of me that EVERY TIME Pikachu was on the screen she would go, "Mommy, look, PIKACHU!" gawd that was annoying. can't say I didn't bring it on myself tho.

I've taken to going to see movies on opening day around 2 pm, all the a**holes are still in school or haven't crawled out of their holes yet to be loud during the movie, or make-out loudly, or kick my chair, or let their cell phones go off ETC. ETC.


- Went to see HULK (Ang lee ver.) the theater made me and a friend wait in a line almost an hour into the starting time of the movie (we had gotten there an hour early to get good seats too) On top of that, the theater had not been properly cleaned, it was filthy. In the middle of the movie, I had gotten up to refill my popcorn & drink (we ate most of it simply waiting in line that extra hour) and on my way back, I slipped on some liquid on the floor and fell onto a very large woman who was seated and enjoying the movie. I apologized profusely and thankfully didn't spill on her.


- Went to see Star Wars Revenge of the Sith, about halfway thru the movie, specifically when Anakin and Padme are each staring longfully into the night sky, some dude in one of the front rows goes "huughhkkkK!!!". At first I chalk it up to someone being a jerk about the acting in the scene, but later the lights came on and paramedics came in. Movie stops, it seems he had a stroke or something. Everyone in the theater got re-located into the next available showing of the movie (which I'm sure people trying to get into that showing didn't take to kindly to).

I managed to get a good seat, but there was a dude with his 3 year old next to me that kept asking, "Now?!.....Now?!,,,,,,,Now?!" everytime R2D2 wasn't on screen. Thankfully he stopped by the time we reached the part we had cut off from an hour and a half earlier.


- During X-men 3 there was some guy behind me that had his girlfriend telling him everything that was going on in the movie, just after it happened. I didn't think there were people that had such difficulty following a movie like that.


-Went to see 9 with a ladyfriend. There was a couple next to us chatting it up for pretty much the first half of the movie. They were whispering, but lout enough that we could hear them. My friend (being the one sitting right next to them) asks them to hold their conversation till after the movie as they were disrupting our enjoyment of the movie.
 
Never had any major disaster so to speak, but my only annoyance is when I saw RENT in theaters (I have never seen the original Broadway). A group of teenage girls simply would not shut up throughout the entire film, giggling and making stupid jokes. It got worse during the death of a major character and the girls just kept giggling and mock-crying at the funeral scene. Killed the most emotional part of the entire film for me. Geez, thanks a lot.
 
Most of these involved me and my sister seeing a movie together:

The Simpsons movie and Transformers 2 BOTH had a rediculous amount of kids in the theater who simply would not shut up. It was worse with TF2, an already bad film that they repeated every "hillarious" line of crass sex jokes and curse words.

It was almost as bad for when we went to see the dark knight, in which there was a small group of kids behind us who just kept talking. It got so bad that halfway through my sister leaned back and told them to shut up. At least at that point they did not talk for the rest of the movie.

More recently was when I saw Rio, a fairly underwhelming film I only chose to see because my car was being fixed (thankfully for free because they missed something last time) and I was stuck at that shopping center for a few hours. Anyway, I was watching videos on my phone while waiting for the movie to start(it was only playing trailers/commercials), and this lady with a group of kids sat down two seats away from me even though there were plenty of seats in the theater. I turned off my phone videos when the ice age short started, but after the movie, an Usher came in saying people were complaining about me on my phone? What the hell?! They were really that upset about not being able to properly hear "kung fu staring contest" for the 50th time? I can't believe she was so stuck up about freaking TRAILERS you can see online for free. At least the usher himself was totally cool and nonchalant about it.
 
I actually work in a theatre, so I have a few stories that are from that perspective rather than as an audience member.

Opening day of The Dark Knight we had some pretty long lines, as I'm sure you can imagine. I was in the hallway watching the line to get into the theatre (the previous show was still playing). The line was already fairly long, but not so long that if someone got in at that moment they would have to get a front row seat or anything. So, while walking the line, I noticed a family of four to five people siting on a bench across the hall from the line. I thought they were probably waiting for someone to get out of the restroom or something like that, but when they hadn't moved after about five minutes I decided to approach them and ask if they were here for the next show of TDK. They said yes, so I suggested that they needed to go ahead and get in line. One of the guys said they'd been there for "a long time" (they hadn't) and figured they shouldn't have to wait in line; they should get in first.

I apologized and told him that no, he wasn't going to go in first. I told if he hopped in line now he could still get a pretty good seat, but if he stayed on the bench I was going to have to let in the line completely before I could let him in. He replied, "You know what? You're a moron. I want a refund." I said, okay, and took him over to guest services. When he got there he told the GS manager, "I want a refund because that guy there" pointing to me "is a moron." While he was getting his refund his little kid was asking, "Daddy, why aren't we going to see the movie?" He replied, "Because that guy's a moron." After he finally got a refund and was about to leave I said, "Good night," and he replied, "Moron."

I've also caught being doing things... they shouldn't be doing in the theatre.

A few years ago I was doing an auditorium check (making sure the picture and sound and audience are all good, etc.) on Reno 911. We have to walk through the entire auditorium, so I first walked down to the screen, turned around, and saw that there was no one in the auditorium. I was about to leave (no point if no one is there) when I saw a flash of white all the way up in the top row. I immediately thought it could be a couple enjoying each other's company too much, but I thought, "No way."

I started to walk up the stairs. When I got up to the top row there was a couple on the floor, completely naked, going at it like rabbits. I was dumbstruck; this was the first time I'd caught someone doing it in my theatre. I guess my keys jingled or something since they heard me and stopped. I couldn't say anything, so I just pointed to the door and shook my head. They started to get dressed when the guy asked, "Can we get some privacy?" Several "witty" comebacks came into mind ("Its a public place," "See that camera pointing right at you") indicating how little privacy the movie theatre had, but I just turned around. They left after that.

On another occasion, a couple of years ago, an auditorium was about to let out, so my ushers were getting set up to clean it. One of my team members, an old lady (late 40s maybe), was going into the theatre to check on capacity and see how long the movie had. In the doorway, right behind the door, was a couple going at it vertically. When the door opened the guy pulled out and turned to the usher, just hanging there. She noticed that, although they were stupid enough to do it in the doorway of a theatre that was not at all empty, they were responsible enough to use protection. The condom fell off as the guy rushed to bathroom and the girl followed to wait right outside.

The team member told me about this experience (it apparently really affect her; she indicated that "she hadn't seen a man since..." before I shouted, "TMI!"), and also pointed out the girl who was still waiting outside the men's restroom. I walked up to her, asked if her boyfriend was in the restroom, and said we'll wait for him to come out.

When he finally came out I pulled him over and told him to pick up his nasty condom off the floor. He denied it was his very firmly, but had no issues with picking it up and throwing it away. I told them next time I would call the police and escorted them out.

Its fun times.
 
Hmmm...

As for technical issues, my dad and I went to see The Fifth Element, and about halfway through the film actually caught fire and burned up. It looked just like it does in the movies, where a small hole starts in the frame and then quickly spreads outward, warping the image and turning a dirty reddish color, leaving nothing but the white screen. After about fifteen minutes, they had a new reel on and we were able to continue the movie, but unfortunately that had been the highlight. :D
.

I actually laughed out loud at that!

As for my personal experiences....

The first Harry Potter film: First time I went to see it, 2 minutes into the movie the projectionist threw up and we spent the rest of the movie looking at this big blob of vomit, some of the audience playing "guess that chunk!".

Mrs. Doubtfire: When I went to see it with my mom, towards the beginning where Robin's recording for the cartoon, the whole film just went out for like 20 minutes! I think we ended up getting a refund or something.
 
- Went to see Star Wars Revenge of the Sith, about halfway thru the movie, specifically when Anakin and Padme are each staring longfully into the night sky, some dude in one of the front rows goes "huughhkkkK!!!". At first I chalk it up to someone being a jerk about the acting in the scene, but later the lights came on and paramedics came in. Movie stops, it seems he had a stroke or something. Everyone in the theater got re-located into the next available showing of the movie (which I'm sure people trying to get into that showing didn't take to kindly to).
e.

I may be burning for this, but I laughed so hard at the "huughhkkkK!!!"!
 
When I went to see Looney Tunes; Back in Action, there were only like, 5 people in the theater.

Being a comedy, I did an unspeakable thing and LAUGHED. Keep in mind that A) I'm in the top row of seats, everyone else is near the bottom and B) I'm not that loud when I laugh. Some guy had the audacity to tell me to be quiet during a movie that you're supposed to laugh at (It was during the Gremlins reference scene BTW).
 

Spotlight

Staff online

Who's on Discord?

Latest profile posts

And now, the stars of 4Kids will sing the National Anthem!
Has anyone here ever taken a tour of the Cartoon Network Studios building in Burbank, CA before it closed? I really wish I could have :(
To celebrate the fact that I got three weeks off from work for rest, I watched today the latest installment in the separate Minions series of movies. What I loved was the unique logo variation of the Universal logo, which was akin to the plot taking place in the late 1800s
HO00001571
Nicktoons in the US has recently aired something that no one expected: an AI generated ad for an overpriced plush toy.
Not everything from DC and Marvel comics needs to be more like the adaptations.

Featured Posts

Back
Top