Cinema chatterboxes must die

writes Donald Clarke.

Being the very model of a flabby western liberal, I pretend to oppose the re-introduction of the death penalty for even the most serious of crimes. Of course, like most reasonable people, I admit that, when subjected to an extreme outrage, I do find my hand itching for the noose or the deadly syringe.

Imagine the situation. You are sitting happily in the cinema when you become aware of an insistent droning emanating from the obese imbecile in front of you.

“Who’s he? Is he the man who was wearing the hat earlier?” he says before shovelling another hundredweight of salted corn kernels into his empty head.

“Paris . . . France . . . 12 o’clock,” his equally detestable mooncalf of a girlfriend says in response to a legend at the bottom of the screen. “Are they in France, now?”

State-approved slaughter is the only reasonable response to talking in the cinema. If you say nothing to the gibbering jackass you will be condemned to an hour or two of silent fuming. If, however, you do decide to have a word, then a simmering tension will hang about the auditorium until the credits roll. How much simpler it would be if you were allowed to whip out an axe – a chainsaw or a revolver might disturb the other cinema-goers – and neatly lop the offenders’ heads off. No decent person would mourn their passing.

Now, I know what you’re thinking. Screenwriter is, here, indulging in unhinged hyperbole. I’m not so sure. I would, I think, genuinely relish the public execution and disembowelment of cinema conversationalists. My girlfriend and I would, perhaps, draw up deckchairs before the scaffold and focus on the wrongdoers’ ashen faces as they were led towards oblivion.

“Who’s he? Is he the man with the popcorn?” I might say.

“I bet that man in the black hood is going to kill that foul woman,” she would reply. “Not so f**king chatty, now. Is she?”

When did people start behaving like pigs in the cinema? A degree of civility persisted throughout the 1960s and 1970s, so you certainly can’t blame the decline in conduct on habits picked up in front of broadcast television. Perhaps it was the arrival of video in the 1980s that blurred the distinction between living room and auditorium. If you jabber before Harry Potter at home then you may feel entitled to jabber before that wizard in public. Whatever the cause, there can be no doubt that today’s cinemagoers are less respectful towards the medium than their parents were.

Or can there? As late as the 1970s, when films still played in a continuous loop, it was quite normal to enter the cinema halfway through the action and remain seated until the next screening reached the point at which you came in. People smoked foul cigarettes, snogged furiously and, if stories about the release of Rock Around the Clock are to be believed, occasionally rioted in the sticky aisles.

They should have strung them all up. It’s the only language they understand.

Source

Course, if it were up to me, I’d unleash the Biblical plagues on them.

Will

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May 3, 2008

Last night, one of Joanne’s mates called her up and told her she was in the cinema. Fortunately my Jo is a decent sort, so she just told her not to call from the cinema then hung up. Needless to say the chavvy bitch didn’t call back.

May 3, 2008

Last night, one of Joanne’s mates called her up and told her she was in the cinema. Fortunately my Jo is a decent sort, so she just told her not to call from the cinema then hung up. Needless to say the chavvy bitch didn’t call back.

May 3, 2008

Last night, one of Joanne’s mates called her up and told her she was in the cinema. Fortunately my Jo is a decent sort, so she just told her not to call from the cinema then hung up. Needless to say the chavvy bitch didn’t call back.

May 3, 2008

*flees in terror for his life*

May 3, 2008

*flees in terror for his life*

May 3, 2008

*flees in terror for his life*

May 3, 2008

I think there should be a stay of execution for those who mutter sarcastic remarks in crappy films. “Aggravated filmslaughter,” or something.

May 3, 2008

I think there should be a stay of execution for those who mutter sarcastic remarks in crappy films. “Aggravated filmslaughter,” or something.

May 3, 2008

I think there should be a stay of execution for those who mutter sarcastic remarks in crappy films. “Aggravated filmslaughter,” or something.

When I went to see Sweeney Todd on New Year’s Eve, ohmigawd, people would not SHUT UP! “Why does he want to kill Turpin?” “Is he gonna marry Mrs. Lovett?” “Why does the Judge sound like Professor Snape, and why does the Beadle look like Wormtail?” Sarah says, in her best Nathan Explosion voice: “Release the locusts!” ~

When I went to see Sweeney Todd on New Year’s Eve, ohmigawd, people would not SHUT UP! “Why does he want to kill Turpin?” “Is he gonna marry Mrs. Lovett?” “Why does the Judge sound like Professor Snape, and why does the Beadle look like Wormtail?” Sarah says, in her best Nathan Explosion voice: “Release the locusts!” ~

When I went to see Sweeney Todd on New Year’s Eve, ohmigawd, people would not SHUT UP! “Why does he want to kill Turpin?” “Is he gonna marry Mrs. Lovett?” “Why does the Judge sound like Professor Snape, and why does the Beadle look like Wormtail?” Sarah says, in her best Nathan Explosion voice: “Release the locusts!” ~

May 3, 2008

Ahhh, SO with you on this! I will happily snark at the ‘time-kill’ screens (they play a powerpoint-esque movie trivia thing before the previews here… and if you get there early you sit through the same ones three times), then I believe that the trailers are your ‘simmer down period’, and by the time the actual film starts, it should be library-quiet in there until the end credits roll. ~Shady

May 3, 2008

Ahhh, SO with you on this! I will happily snark at the ‘time-kill’ screens (they play a powerpoint-esque movie trivia thing before the previews here… and if you get there early you sit through the same ones three times), then I believe that the trailers are your ‘simmer down period’, and by the time the actual film starts, it should be library-quiet in there until the end credits roll. ~Shady

May 3, 2008

Ahhh, SO with you on this! I will happily snark at the ‘time-kill’ screens (they play a powerpoint-esque movie trivia thing before the previews here… and if you get there early you sit through the same ones three times), then I believe that the trailers are your ‘simmer down period’, and by the time the actual film starts, it should be library-quiet in there until the end credits roll. ~Shady

May 3, 2008

PS: Unless it’s a funny film… in which case it’s rude NOT to laugh your ass off at appropriate moments. 😉 ~Shady

May 3, 2008

PS: Unless it’s a funny film… in which case it’s rude NOT to laugh your ass off at appropriate moments. 😉 ~Shady

May 3, 2008

PS: Unless it’s a funny film… in which case it’s rude NOT to laugh your ass off at appropriate moments. 😉 ~Shady

May 3, 2008

I agree with the cinema talking thing. I don’t know why he brought up the fact that the cinema talker was obese, too, like that’s got anything to do with anything. Sooooo sick of fat bashing. But that’s my issue. Go about your business. 🙂

May 3, 2008

I agree with the cinema talking thing. I don’t know why he brought up the fact that the cinema talker was obese, too, like that’s got anything to do with anything. Sooooo sick of fat bashing. But that’s my issue. Go about your business. 🙂

May 3, 2008

I agree with the cinema talking thing. I don’t know why he brought up the fact that the cinema talker was obese, too, like that’s got anything to do with anything. Sooooo sick of fat bashing. But that’s my issue. Go about your business. 🙂