h a l f b a k e r yNaturally low in facts.
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Leonard Shelby checks his polaroid photos... |
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<mih llik - eno eht si eh ,seil sih eveileb t'nod> |
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Would work even better at a drive-in theatre. Baseball movies would be wacky: Keven Kostner hits ball, runs to third base?!? |
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Bring a mirror for those subtitles+ |
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This would work, although humanbean makes some good points. What would not work is 1st2know's drive in idea. Drive in screens are opaque, indoor screens allow some level of permeability making them viewable from the backside. |
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or jsut bring one huge mirror and place it on the backwall and look at it while having your backs to the screen |
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I used to work in a movie theatre during college. While there is a small amount of space behind most screens, you'd be sitting unbearably close. In most modern theatres with quality sound systems, the area behind the screen is taken up by large speaker and subwoofer arrays. |
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The sound would be crappy. Just go to a 2nd-run theater, it's only $1 (which, by the way is less than 1/2 price at a regular theater)! spacecadet triumphs again! |
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I think many ticket purchasers would use the relative seclusion behind the screens for various purposes that management would probably prefer that they didn't. |
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I think it's a taerg aedi. At noissimretni, you could go to the rabkcans for some nrocpop and sknirdtfos. |
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I hadn't considered the handicam notion, probably because the viewing angle would be so bad. I was thinking that other theatergoers' viewing might be disrupted by moaning noises or occasionally crashing noises. |
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