
Steven:
Therefore they look great on the big screen but at home they simply look good. But in a way, it’s great plenty. I enjoy my shows but I don’t need it to sound incredible.  ,
Ben Slater, NTU School of Art, Design and Media:  ,
But there is a key factor in the cinema knowledge that you’re missing out on, which is the collective knowledge.  ,
Steven:
Okay you have to tell me ( about ) that, because it is because of the communal experience that I ( choose to ) stay home.
Ben:
Well, that may be telling us a bit about your character.  ,
Crispina Robert, number:  ,
He has a problem with the dirty seats ( in cinemas ).  ,
Steven:
I’m an entrepreneur. I love socialising, but thousands of people have sat in the seat. I go it and one of the people next to me is talking all the time throughout the film:” Oh did you discover what happened there? What happened in that element”?
Ben:
There is something really great about nobody being together and sharing a picture. And that could be something very psychological. That could be something truly terrible. It could be anything terrifically crazy.
Steven:
But you mean when you giggle and all laughs at the same time?
Ben:
Simply. Or even just that experience when anyone goes absolutely quiet because something really extraordinary happens on screen. We’re talking about the Oscars and at the end of Anora, which is the movie that won the Best Image, that has an incredible peaceful end which is completely devastating.