Cinema etiquette

A 1912 silent film title card, asking patrons not to block the view of those behind them

Cinema etiquette is the set of social norms observed by patrons of a movie theater. There are a wide variety of distractions that could spoil other patrons' enjoyment of a film, such as cell phone usage, patrons talking to one another, the rustling of food packaging, the behavior of children in the audience, and patrons entering and leaving during a screening.

During the era of silent film, recommendations for behavior were displayed on title cards before a screening, offering advice including "Ladies, kindly remove your hats", "Loud talking or whistling not allowed", and "Please applaud with hands only".[1][2] Modern cinemas often display a short reminder for patrons to turn off their cellphones, before the film begins.[3]

Etiquette writers Debrett's released a guide to correct cinema behavior in 2008, after research showed that 66% of moviegoers wanted to see an improvement in cinema etiquette.[1] The most common objections from those polled were having their view blocked by a tall patron in front, or having their own seat kicked from behind.[1] Debrett's five recommendations were to arrive on time, to sit still, to refrain from whispering during the film, to wait for a loud scene before eating wrapped candy, and for couples to restrain from excessive displays of affection.[1]

In 2010, film critics Mark Kermode and Simon Mayo proposed a "Code of Conduct for Moviegoers", suggesting among other things that cinema patrons should refrain from slurping drinks or eating "anything harder than a soft roll with no filling", should not use cellphones even in flight mode, and should neither remove their shoes nor rest their feet on other seats.[4][5] The Code criticizes "irresponsible" parents who take young children to 12A certificate films they have no interest in seeing, describing it as "using the cinema as a babysitter".[4] Film blog ScreenCrush later compiled a list entitled "Movie Manners: 10 Tips on How Not to Be a Jerk at the Movies". In addition to some of the more obvious suggestions, they advise against spoiling the film for other patrons by discussing it on the way out, and recommend using the restroom prior to the film.[6] A 2012 survey of British cinemagoers found that 66% of respondents could recall objecting to another patron's poor etiquette, but had not objected to it for fear of causing a "scene". 85% of those polled favored the adoption of an official cinema code of conduct.[7]

To address the need for a code of conduct during film screenings, various theaters and cinemas have proposed special showings in response to patron complaints and requests. Vue Cinemas chain introduced adults-only screenings of films in 2008, noting customer complaints about a "hubbub of noise" from children at afternoon screenings.[8] In 2008, the Picturehouse Cinemas in the United Kingdom experimented with a ban on popcorn, partly in response to requests from patrons.[9] Empire Cinemas promoted its own etiquette guide in 2012, displaying it on posters in auditoriums.[7] The Alamo Drafthouse theater chain is known for strictly enforcing a strict etiquette code for audiences, and used an irate customer's telephone complaint about being ejected for violating it as part of their marketing.[10]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Cockcroft, Lucy (18 August 2009). "Debrett's release guide to cinema etiquette". The Telegraph. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  2. James, Andrea (21 January 2015). "PSAs for movie theatre jerks from a century ago". Boing Boing. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  3. Casti, Taylor (9 October 2013). "Because of iPad, 'Little Mermaid' Will Never Be the Same". Mashable. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  4. 1 2 "Ten annoying breaches of cinema etiquette - BBC News". BBC News.
  5. "Wittertainment's Code of Conduct" (PDF). BBC Radio 5 Live. 2010. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  6. "Movie Manners: 10 Tips on How Not to Be a Jerk at the Movies". ScreenCrush. 2012-07-24. Retrieved 2016-01-06.
  7. 1 2 "Cinema Etiquette Guide". Empire Cinemas. 13 November 2012. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  8. Mark Brown. "Vue to offer over-18 only screenings". the Guardian.
  9. Stephen Adams (10 August 2008). "Cinemas to trial popcorn free film screenings". Telegraph.co.uk.
  10. Bierly, Mandi (6 June 2011). "The Alamo Drafthouse has a way more effective anti-talking/texting warning than 'Silence is Golden'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2 April 2016.
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