Ok. I’ve seen most of that because school showed it. In typical school style though we probably only watched the first hour. I’ve just realised… that’s another thing that reinforced my idea that all films were 3 hours + … because we never saw the ends of films at school so I just presumed they went on for a couple of hours more.
Ok I won't argue, you win! The last time I went to the cinema was when my wife insisted I watched Bridget Jones' Baby. We went to Meadowhall. The evening got off to a bad start when I apologised to the ticket seller for having no ID for my oldie ticket. She said "Don't worry, I've given you an oldie ticket anyway". Once inside, I was the only man in there, surrounded by enthusiastic broody ladies who spontaneously burst into tears the whole time. The film was like being forced to watch Sheffield Wednesday winning 8-0 away. Never again.
Wet play, last day of school at Christmas/end of term reward, studying traditional tales, studying film techniques (sound effects, animation, filming), comparing text to film, creating storyboards etc.
Just out of curiosity, does that extend to other types of fiction... tv shows, books, theatre? Or is it just films? I know that @JamDrop is a book lover, for example, and given the choice I'd take a book over a film any day of the week, but I still like films when I'm in the mood for one.
Yep, I'm a complete philistine, I can't stand theatre, books, shows etc, and I hardly watch TV except the news. I can read and write though.
I love it, but I never buy a programme, unless I'm in it, in which case Whitey gives me a free one anyway.