Wednesday, January 17, 2007

I, cinema hermit.

I'm not sure how it happened, but I've become one of those people who tell other people off. Or at least get pissed with other strangers for doing small, yet intensely irritating things. How did I get like this?

I think the 'inciting incident' (film wank terms abound - what do you expect?) was when I went to a movie with Marc and Sasha (who isn't a native NZer), and some teenagers kept talking loudly well into the opening sequence. Sasha, quite casually, told them to please shut up... and lo and behold, they did! And for the whole session, as quiet as leetle meeces! I was amazed, and quite frankly a little envious that I didn't have Sasha's chutzpah. Noone - and I mean noone - does this here. New Zealanders tend not to want to rock any sort of boat, we're so scared of having to connect to strangers, we'd rather suffer and try and bear most things for 'a little while'.

Case in point a few years later when the much awaited sequel to The Matrix came out - some friends, Stephen and I had managed to get tickets to the sold-out midnight session at the huge IMAX screen, the kind of screen you have to turn your head to see from corner to corner, eagerly waiting with hundreds of other people for the utter disappointment that was Matrix Reloaded. Sigh. Let's not speak of that again. Anyway, some COMPLETE PRICK had brought a laser pointer, and started circling Carrie Ann Moss's boobies and Keanu's butt cheeks (and let's face it, it was a him - girls don't find utterly unfunny shit like that funny. What's funny is that some misguided folk accuse women of having no sense of humour. Go figure). It was like some horror version of the Seinfeld episode, I heard some other BUM-SHITS laughing (probably his FART-AIR-HEADED friends), and it made my blood boil. Pretty soon I wasn't watching the movie, I was steeling myself and clenching my fists in readiness for the next time DICKFACE-COCK-WANKER deemed it time for yet another puerile laser light show, willing myself not to charge through the cinema helter skelter, screaming "DO THAT ONE MORE TIME, AND I SHOVE THIS STRAW DOWN YOUR URETHRA!". By the end of the film, I was shattered. Shaking with anger, I think Stephen had to murmur 'calm blue ocean, calm blue ocean' into my ear as he gently chaperoned me out.

From that moment on, I made a pact to myself. The next time anybody impinged on my cinema experience like that, by golly I was going to do something about it. Stephen said something like "What good will that do? What if they don't stop?". I think I screamed back "Well at least I'd have bloody tried! Nobody else did a fucking thing, did they! Stupid New Zealanders!".

And I think that's what got to me. In an audience of 800 or more, noone told BABOON-REAR-PIMPLE-ASS to can it. I was sure I wasn't the only person getting pissed off at this - some friends on the other side of the theatre said they got annoyed, but like me, they didn't do anything about it. Never again. I squinted my eyes and growled it. Never again.

So I waited. I watched, and I waited. Next time anybody even dared to snigger to their friends about something, I was ready. It started extending to cellphones - idiot hair-flicky girls checking their messages every 2 minutes, the cellphone screen light blinding my peripheral vision. People crackling their popcorn bags. The disgusting sound of saliva shucking around their mouths as they chewed gummy lollies. I was there - oh yes, I was there. I was there to shoot them evil glances down the row. I was there to tell them to please put their cellphones away (YOU SUPERFICIAL AIRHEAD, WHY EVEN COME INTO THE MOVIE IF YOU'RE NOT GOING TO WATCH IT???). I was miss cinema crabby and boy did I have attitude enough.

One fateful day it was the advertisements before Russian vampire flick NightWatch and I was talking to Vishakan. He looked at the screen and made a face. "Oh no, laser pointer". I bristled. What? A laser pointer? I looked at the darkening screen. Sure enough, there was a little dancing red dot. Aha! Here was my chance to rectify the exact same offence that had so irritated me so many years ago! Yes! Redress at last! All I had to do was wait... and if they dared do it again.... I cleared my throat...

"Could whoever's doing that please stop?"

Silence. Then sniggers from the front. Giggles rippled through the audience and turned into a few brays of laughter. I froze. I looked closely at the screen... and then I wanted a hole in my plush seat to open up and swallow me.

The dancing red light was part of the fucking film. That's right. Some sadistic Russian dude had actually made little fly demons in his opening sequence look exactly like a dick in the audience with a laser pointer. I mean, what kind of sick person does that? Seriously? Who? WHOOO!!? The whole movie was ruined because I felt like such an idiot. I sunk low in my seat when the lights came up so nobody would 'recognise' me. Pity that my friends were there with me and will never let me live it down.

Anyway, since then, I've tried to mellow a bit. Or something. What I've really done is find some non-intrusive defence mechanisms to employ when another cinema goer is bugging me.

Problem: bright in-movie cell-phone usage?
Solution: identify location of airhead dick or dickess, and move to different row.

Problem: noisy crinkly snack food wrappers?
Solution: bring own crinkly bag 'o' snacks (this is a recent discovery, and works suprisingly well! Not for a crinkly-noise-making competition, but for bearing the other crinkly noises. Somehow I don't care as much when I'm munching on my own snacks! Try it! It works!)

Problem: talking peeps?
Solution: identify location of blabbermouths, and move far away. If they don't stop, tell them to politely shut their fat stinking gobs.

Problem: laser light show?
Solution: Make sure it's a laser pointer, and not some idiot Russian vampire effect. Identify location of POO-FOR-BRAINS, and if they do it again, put on latex gloves and shove straw down urethra. Drink may have to be subsequently drunk without straw, but it's a price one has to pay.

Perfection? That rare occasion when you are the only patron in the theatre. Ahhh, bliss. I think I've always cherished this. One of my film tutors once said that he actually seeks out full house sessions because he enjoys 'feeling the audience reaction'. I think he's mad, but then again, I'm a crotchety old cinema hermit. Bah humbug.

Breakfast:
Milo and my brother-in-law's home-made muesli with organic full-cream milk.

Verdict:
Lovely stuff. I actually think I could get used to it, but the muesli often runs out too quickly. And oh, I don't care if nobody cares what I have for breakfast, I care. Raspberries and "go aways" to them 'nobody's'.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Wha wha?!
I have on many occassions told people to please be quiet, polite at first and then if need be, pulled out the "can you shut the hell up?"
I paid for my ticket and theres no way I'm going to let pricks ruin it.
Once a kid ran up and down the aisle , so I grabbed him by the sleeve and said, hey we're trying to watch a movie.
Everyone is probably in the same boat, sitting there, tolerating, thinking, someones got to say something soon.. .soon...

Jemima Bast said...

Hey there, I'd like to say I've just viewed your ACE film and want to be a part of your film making career. Acting is part of my heritage and I've just written a book on how I have claimed residency in NZ, and I so feel at ease with my life; now I've watched your documentary. I seem to identify with you in some way and I love the way you write down a list of what you eat. I do the same thing most days and always report it to my husband. Secretly I want to eat far less but how impossible it seems. Yes, I'm thin, but well it's my acne. Have you any advice oh nutritionist? Oh no, my prejudices are starting to appear because of the Chinese culture and eating hot food. Sorry, they sort of come out without me thinking. I did have a friend once from Japan and her skin was amazing. Her family never ate chocolate.
I love your movie and would love to make a documentary too. At the moment my first book, a NZ relocation guide, is looking for a literary agent in the United Kingdom (my birth place and place of residence for 26 years).
Can I be an actress in your next movie? I am 30, white, female with clipped, shaved hair, and a singing voice to die for.Currently composing an album.
Oh, I need a friend who is very successful too, so if you want to write to me for any reason, then do. Your movie was so me, I can't tell you! I mean I just have; but what I want to say is that I felt normal as soon as I saw it. I thought: "Oh some normal people". I feel akin with your world. God, thank god. I call god: the law, "Earth Angel"-my next book, after I have pursued my goal to study a degree in anything but drama as I haven't acted in a movie or stage production professionally since finishing Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts in London! Does any of this make sense? I hope so. It does to me, I think???
Sorry if I'm barking up the wrong tree about my acting career, but you're a NZealander and so am I; it's not Hollywood! Yet, but who knows.
Tomorrow never seems to come or does it.