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Hearing the audience react along to the film - laughing at the jokes, letting their breath out at the end of a tense action scene, the murmurs of approval at key moments - it's a fantastic sharing experience. In fact, seeing a film or a concert with an audience is one of the last communal things we do as a society (not all everyone in the crowd at a sporting event is cheering for the same team).
On opening night there's that extra special air of excitement and anticipation - we're all the people that really want to see the film so badly we take the first opportunity. There's an incredibly infectious sense of anticipation and excitement there.
Finally, projected film in a theatre has four times the clarity of a Blu-ray on an HD TV. No matter how great your setup is at home, you're watching dramatically reduced picture quality - and for a Bond film with fantastic cinematography like SF that's a shame. Even the 2K digital theatres are still twice as clear as Blu-ray/hi-def.
One of my favourite memories will always be seeing TLD at the flicks.
TLD rocked as did LTK on the big screen....dalton the complete bond.
I never saw LTK on the big screen because I was only 7 when it came out. If there's one thing I do before I die it has to be that, I'd jump at the chance to see it at the cinema.
Dalton was the complete and best Bond. Should've done more in the early 90s before GE.
As an aside, TND was my most thrilling Bond-in-cinema experience.
TLD was mine although Goldeneye was pretty awesome because after waiting for years we finally had a new Bond film! I don't think I'd ever been more pleased to see a gunbarel in my life.
Anyway, my favourite way to watch them at home is on my TV (not a huge plasma screen but it's HD and it's big enough) with a take away (pizza, chinese, indian, chippy, anything really), a few cans and somebody to enjoy it with.
The first Bond film I saw there was GF and it was a real wake up call! This is the film that I've probably seen the most in my life; and I saw it constantly at a young, impressionable age so it was really cemented in my mind. To see it in a theatre was mind-blowing. All the detail that I could never see before - incredible! And to think how impressed I had been in the past to jump up from TV showings of worn out prints to VHS, then from VHS to DVD. But the leap from DVD to 35mm projected film was astonishing and words just couldn't do it justice. It was like seeing it again for the first time.
Another benefit was all the young university students who had never seen it before. Hearing their reactions made me remember some of my own - like "What the hell are all these Chinese guys doing in Switzerland?" and that incredible moment when Goldfinger reveals the true nature of his plan when Bond talks about how many hours it would take to remove the gold from Fort Knox. To say nothing of the reveal of Jill in gold paint - if you can believe it some people were surprised by it!
At the cinema with lots of popcorn, soft drink and during the first two weeks of the release date.
DVD (at home) with the lights out, fireplace, cuddling with lady friend
Second choice however, snuggled up in darkness, a drink and a snack, the world of Bond on an 80cm flat screen, depending on the mood, I will watch Vhs, Blu-ray, or DVD. :D
isn't he cute!?!
I also like to see my Bond films with as least spoilers as possible. I always wait a week to hear fan, not an industry worker's reaction before seeing the Bond film ever since I felt ripped off by DAD. Somehow I felt that they did more anniversary promotion for that than they did for SF with all glitz and glam for bedazzling some predictable film.
I also like to go to older movie theaters where the experience feels more classic.
:-<
Wait for the DVD then.
He's an idiot for taking his kid to see a Bond film? Maybe the kid liked the films? Or maybe he wanted to introduce his son to them?
Aren't you the guy who, on another thread, was bragging about how he "hilariously" yelled out bullsh*t during Goldeneye when you were a kid? Well now you know how it feels. And for the record I think what you did is much more annoying.
I agree 100%. I hate when parents drag their whining little kids to public places, so annoying, especially at the movies. The money these slobs spend on junkfood at the theaters is atrocious, the price of a bucket of popcorn is a weeks worth money of groceries for me!
oh and @thelivingroyale, its chips,not crisps honey
Think about your first Bond movie at the cinema, how old were you? Chances are you were a teenager or even younger, did you enjoy it? Would you really want to rob kids today of the same experience?
If kids and teenagers didn't see Bond films the movies wouldn't make as much money. And believe it or not we'll all be dead at some point so it's up to future generations to keep the franchise going.
I took my sisters kid to see Skyfall and he loved it.
Y'know what I hate? When a conspiracy theory posting troll nobody likes repeatedly gets banned and makes new accounts, but then it takes a few days to ban him every time and we're stuck with him for the time being.
perhaps this article will help shed a little light on your ignorance towards others
http://www.secretsofthefed.com/33-conspiracy-theories-that-turned-out-to-be-true/