bound to obey and serve ([info]elfundeb) wrote,
@ 2005-09-27 01:45:00
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Movie Meme Update
Nineteen of my twenty movies were guessed, which means either that I've got common tastes or that my memory of the more obscure movies I've seen -- which I am not periodically reminded of -- is deficient. A couple of clues for #3. First, though the photo is black & white, the movie's not that old. Second, look at the setting of the photo. What's that behind the characters? Third, I put up a new photo here.

I really enjoyed this game, even though I was spectacularly bad at it. I found I couldn't identify even my favorite films based on a single pic, unless the scene had become fixed in my mind for some reason. (One film I couldn't identify until I unwittingly chose the same pic for my set.)

Another phenomenon was the number of films others chose that I've never seen but really want to see. So why don't I run to the video store? Problem is, I hate watching films on TV. The screen is too small, and the distractions are too many. I love a darkened theatre, with a big screen that demands my full attention.

Back in the days when I was young and impecunious, there was a wonderful cheap repertory theatre here in town, the Biograph, where the fare consisted primarily of all the old films all of you chose. I have not seen any of those films since the Biograph closed and was converted to a CVS pharmacy.

My question: Do you enjoy watching movies on video? What can I do to make video-watching more like going to the theatre? Do I need to turn my basement into a home theatre? Because I really do want to see Dr. Strangelove.



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[info]elfundeb
2005-09-29 06:53 pm UTC (link)
If distractions are a big problem at home, would it be possible for you to close the door to the room where the TV lives? Perhaps even ask not to be disturbed for the next ninety minutes?

Alas, the TV lives in a room that is open to two other rooms (including the kitchen) and the telephone is only 10 feet away. We have another TV -- 25 years old, not cable ready -- in the basement, but it has no DVD or VCR attached to it.

I'm beginning to think that the solution is to watch the movies on my laptop in my bedroom. Is Dr. Strangelove available in DVD or just video?

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[info]skelkins
2005-09-29 09:52 pm UTC (link)
Erk! Feeling your pain on that one. Our house has a fairly open floor plan as well, and the television drives me crazy from both angles: I don't like hearing the noise from it when I'm not the one watching it, and when I am the one watching it, I find the constant distractions from the rest of the house very annoying.

The laptop idea sounds like a good one. It looks like Netflix has Strangelove on DVD, so I suspect you could find it at a rental place as well.

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