Unlike the yesteryears, you now need to reserve seats in order to watch a movie. Gone were the days when you can enter the theater in the middle of a screening. That is why you need to plan where you will be sitting.
The trick is simple. First, you need to fall in line and buy a ticket. Then, when it’s your turn, you check out the seats. Regardless of whether or not the cinema house has an aisle, if you want to be alone don’t pick the center spots. I’m not saying it will not work by sitting in the middle but I’m just saying that it’s difficult to space it that way. I’m also washing my hands if this is an I-Max Theatre or a very popular movie playing around the AFTERNOON because the number of people inside might make or break you in successfully doing this equation.
You see, this is meant for you to have a free reign on the events that might or could happen inside the movie theater. Sure, you’ll watch the movie with that sole intent but what if there could be more?
Don’t you want more?
Anyway, a typical cinema house consists of 30 to 40 seats horizontally! HORIZONTALLY! This is the magic word here! If let’s say, a couple would claim the seats A1 and A2, A3 and A4, A5 and A6, and so on and so forth, then there will be 20 couples seating pretty and brushing elbows watching the same movie. But how bout you take… let’s say A38 and A39…
Who in their right mind would sit in A40? This would probably free A37 as well… not unless the moviegoers sitting there is from a pack of three or more.
Watching alone? It’s sad to even think that there is a person who likes to watch movies in a movie theater alone. This person might not know about DVD’s.
If this was a box-office bomb, this will not matter and you’ll probably make out openly without strangers checking you out. However if this is a popular flick, then you’ll find it hard to make out… but at least you won’t put your bag in the movie theatre’s very sticky floor!
Well not unless the person who would sit in that spot is a creepy guy who loves to do “solo” acts in public places.
The trick is simple. First, you need to fall in line and buy a ticket. Then, when it’s your turn, you check out the seats. Regardless of whether or not the cinema house has an aisle, if you want to be alone don’t pick the center spots. I’m not saying it will not work by sitting in the middle but I’m just saying that it’s difficult to space it that way. I’m also washing my hands if this is an I-Max Theatre or a very popular movie playing around the AFTERNOON because the number of people inside might make or break you in successfully doing this equation.
You see, this is meant for you to have a free reign on the events that might or could happen inside the movie theater. Sure, you’ll watch the movie with that sole intent but what if there could be more?
Don’t you want more?
Anyway, a typical cinema house consists of 30 to 40 seats horizontally! HORIZONTALLY! This is the magic word here! If let’s say, a couple would claim the seats A1 and A2, A3 and A4, A5 and A6, and so on and so forth, then there will be 20 couples seating pretty and brushing elbows watching the same movie. But how bout you take… let’s say A38 and A39…
Who in their right mind would sit in A40? This would probably free A37 as well… not unless the moviegoers sitting there is from a pack of three or more.
Watching alone? It’s sad to even think that there is a person who likes to watch movies in a movie theater alone. This person might not know about DVD’s.
If this was a box-office bomb, this will not matter and you’ll probably make out openly without strangers checking you out. However if this is a popular flick, then you’ll find it hard to make out… but at least you won’t put your bag in the movie theatre’s very sticky floor!
Well not unless the person who would sit in that spot is a creepy guy who loves to do “solo” acts in public places.
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