fan of cinema ?

Hye!

I have lauched a new cinema website:

formatting link
best reviews you have ever seen. Give me your opinion

See ya !

Sponge Bob

Reply to
lepongebob
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There's not a mention of needlework or textiles. It's not even got the decency to be in English. And what does "best reviews" mean? Most accurate, most sycophantic?

Reply to
ricardianno

Too right! And what's the point of cinema anyway? Now if they would leave the lights up enough so we could stitch during the flick....

Reply to
Brenda Lewis

Precisely why I prefer to wait till it comes on TV. (And cheaper, too. More money for stash.....)

Reply to
Karen C - California

At least if it's on TV you don't have to listen to umpteen people unwrapping and chomping their way through sweets, chocolates, popcorn, fizzy drinks etc. And if you video it from TV you can have a break when YOU want one, nobody will pinch your seat AND you can fast-forward through the interminable advertisements. Last time Maureen and I went to the cinema we were in Plymouth, Devon and we went to see "Ann of the 1,000 days"...

Reply to
ricardianno

Last time we were in a cinema was in Aldeburgh - to see "The Lion in Winter!" Most of John`s family are in Plymouth - they all seem to live at the top of steep hills!!! He was bombed out three times there! Our son was at Stonehouse for a while while in the Royal Marines. We love the old Pannier Market.

You`re dead right about going to the cinema these days - no pleasure in it at all. I do wish they would invent something that automatically cut the adverts out at the press of a button. I record a lot of things I watch on TiVo for that reason - so I can speed through them! Otherwise you just have time to put the kettle on or go to the loo! LOL!

In any case I treat it mostly as radio while I`m stitchinh, just look up at the vital points!

How`s the weather up there in Stronsay? The heavy rain they promised us is starting here, so we have a sheet of plastic over the telephone/fax machine - last real downpour was so heavy it shifted the conservatory roof and I had to dry the phone out with a hair-dryer! DBIL did a first aid job on it, but I don`t trust it until it`s been fixed properly.

Pat P

Reply to
Pat P

We used to have a flat in Plymouth, Durnford Street if memory serves me correctly. I was at RAF Mountbatten (3 MHU RAuxAF). Weather up here is lovely today (Wednesday). Out in the garden most of the day.

Reply to
ricardianno

My problem with going to the movies is the sound. It isn't balanced correctly and is waaaay too loud. We've wanted to see a couple of pictures on the big screen, but our last two visits were so awful (sound too loud and unbalanced) that we wait for the DVD.

Dianne

Reply to
Dianne Lewandowski

For things that I really want to see (as opposed to things that might be enjoyable), I have figured out that the DVD only costs a dollar or two more than going alone, by the time you add in my bus fare and lunch somewhere. And cheaper than paying a friend's way in, in exchange for their driving me so I don't need to take the bus.

So, for those, I get the DVD, we pass it around the family, and eventually it comes back to me for keeps.

Reply to
Karen C - California

Keyham! That`s where John`s Gran used to live! Small world!

Absolutely TIPPING it down here! Just getting ready for our son and family to arrive, of course.

Pat P

Reply to
Pat P

"> The "movies" as we called them, have always called to me, but where I live now it takes me an hour to get to the poor little beaten up 5plex where about one seat in 20 is broken. I used to go to the matinees, ($2.00) so that I wouldn't have to drive home in the dark; besides, I'm cheap. No more. Gas back and forth for the 100 miles round trip makes even the most expensive DVD cheap. (Grin) Anyway, I joined Netflix and get to see all the movies I can stand.

Reply to
Konna

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