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Do quicker digital releases hurt a movie's chances at the box office?
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2024 discussion threads
After upgrading to an oled TV theatres picture quality is just inferior. So now I really don't want to watch movies in theatres.
Sure the sounds is still better, but it's usually too loud for me, and lacks subtitles.
Add to that the ludicrous cost of theatre tickets and it's just not worth it.
This I suspect is an underappreciated aspect of the dynamics at the moment. More broadly, it's about the personalisation of the watching experience. Screen size, seating/lying position, noise and brightness, subtitles and their language, audio configuration (where you can optimise your home set up to help with dialogue clarity or "epicness")
ludicrous prices? the nicest Dolby cinema tickets at AMC are like ten bucks
sure you spend more on snacks but you can also just not
At my local theatre the nice seats are $18 and the slightly cheaper normal seats are $15. That's including fees for times outside of working hours.
A theatre outing for me and my wife costs more than a 4k uhd bluray for the movies we watch.
That's not even including food, which if we go to a theatre we usually bring to avoid the high food prices.
Ten bucks? Where you at
American cinema prices are not the only cinema prices.
what are prices like across the pond?
About 30 PLN for a standard seat in Poland, but that's not really going to tell the whole story without looking at things like the median income, average prices of other goods etc.
For some reference, that's the price for a month of standard Netflix over here.
I cheapskate the whole cinema-going experience - I have a monthly pass that is paid off by two or three visits a month (I go twice a week - one week last month I went 5 times, but 3 of those was a LotR marathon), plus I bring my own snacks and a bottle of water. Probably works out at the equivalent of three bucks a pop plus petrol, for big, wide reclining seats and iSense where available.