Los Angeles Times

Movie date after so long? Heaven

- MARY McNAMARA

My husband and I went to the movies last weekend. I can’t remember the last time we did that.

Pre-pandemic, this was something people would often say either as an expression of delight over a proposed plan — “Yes, let’s; I can’t remember the last time we went to the movies” — or, sometimes for couples, as an accusation: “What kind of relationsh­ip is this? I can’t even remember the last time we went to the movies.”

Either way, it was usually an expression of “It’s been too long,” rather than “I honestly cannot remember.”

But I honestly cannot. I go to a lot of movies, sometimes alone for work but often with one or all of my children. I love the movie experience so much that I don’t even care if the actual film disappoint­s. Good or bad, it will have wrenched me from daily life and my own overcrowde­d head, ushered me in through the soothing popcorn-scented murmur of the lobby, burrowed me deep into darkness and returned me, dazzled in one way or another, to sidewalk and car with a thousand new thoughts.

Even if those thoughts run along the lines of “How on earth does [fill in the blank] still get to make movies?” I am almost always refreshed.

My husband is a bit more picky. After two decades of taking children to movies he would otherwise have never seen in a million years (“Brother Bear” comes to mind), Richard is really interested only in the genre once known as “art house.” And while he will sit, rapt, through a live theater performanc­e so awful that half the audience bolts at intermissi­on, he would rather skip a movie entirely if there’s the slightest chance he will not like it.

He must be convinced that a superhero movie is somehow more than a superhero movie (which is how we got him to see “Black Panther” and “Wonder Woman”) and will not see a horror film unless it is subtitled. He definitely hard-passed on “The Turning,” which may have been the last nonfestiva­l film I saw in a theater.

I recently found, in my coat pocket, tickets to “Bombshell,” which the

whole family saw at the Cinepolis Luxury Cinema as a holiday treat. (Did I ever think a ticket stub for “Bombshell” would make me weep? No I did not, but neither did I imagine “The Turning” would be my last commercial theatrical experience for 14 months.) Probably “Parasite” was our last date-night movie, but honestly, I’m just guessing.

This made selecting the film to see on our fully vaxxed return both thrilling and daunting. If “The Turning” was my last, I definitely wanted my “first” to be a good one, and that’s a lot of pressure to put on any movie. Especially because there haven’t been any big openings yet aside from “Godzilla vs. Kong,” which we would not be seeing under any circumstan­ces.

We wanted to go to the Laemmle in Pasadena, the site of so many date nights past, which narrowed the options to 11. Would we be judged by the first movie we saw after the great pandemic? What if our choice wasn’t cool enough? More important, what if we picked one we didn’t like? What if, as so many theater owners fear, all these months of total control, in which we could simply switch to another movie if the one we were watching failed to captivate, had ruined us for the theatrical experience?

We could have played it safe with “Nomadland,” “Minari” or “The Father,” but we had already seen them (in my case, twice) and, as a former TV critic, I just don’t buy the “you need to see it in a theater” argument, even when Frances McDormand makes it. (Sorry, Fran. I still

love you!)

In the end, we chose “Together Together,” because the title seemed apt, and who doesn’t like Ed Helms and Patti Harrison?

After staring at my genuine movie theater ticket (well, bar code) with the kind of anticipato­ry thrill I have historical­ly felt only in airports at the start of a vacation, I wanted to leave for the Laemmle instantly, never mind that it was three hours before showtime. We compromise­d and got there a half-hour early.

Even with all the jittery joy, it was strange how familiar it all felt: the search for parking, the discussion about whether to first duck into Vroman’s next door (before I reminded Richard that we have never spent less than 30 minutes in a bookstore), the buttery bright smell of that movie

theater popcorn.

Yes, there were arrows and social-distancing marks on the floor, an incredibly thorough guide to handwashin­g on the restroom mirror, and masks on every employee, every patron and even every character in the movie posters on the walls.

But otherwise, everything else was exactly the same. The patterned

carpet, the old-fashioned theater seats, the hushed but ringing silence of a theater before the lights go down and the trailers begin. We were two of perhaps a dozen audience members, most of an early vaccineeli­gible demographi­c, and we huddled in highly distanced groups, removing our masks to eat or drink and then putting them back on again.

Then the lights went down and for two hours it

was as if the pandemic did not exist, had never occurred. “Together Together” was sweet and smart and funny enough, but even if I had hated it, I was at the movies. A haven from heartbreak, anxiety and bad weather of all sorts, a place of necessary solitude, romantic anticipati­on, friendly bonding and familial celebratio­n.

After a year of crowded isolation, there were no interrupti­ons from kids needing something; no ambient distractio­n courtesy of nearby leaf blower

or power tool; no hitting pause to check and see whether the meatloaf was done yet. Once I’d committed to it, the experience

was literally out of my hands. I couldn’t use this time to also sort laundry or check my email or do the dishes; I couldn’t carry this screen from one room to another to see what the dogs were barking at this time or balance it on the counter while I did the dishes.

I was at the movies, and for two glorious hours, all I could do was watch and listen and be.

That and fidget in my seat pretty much constantly. About an hour in, I wondered when the Laemmle’s seats had gotten so uncomforta­ble before realizing it was me. With the exception of my recent in-flight viewing of the Oscars, I am no longer accustomed to watching two hours of anything in a stationary and upright position. Instead, I drape and slump and lean or, when watching on a personal screen, go horizontal. (I feel like the post-pandemic workspace is going to require a lot of personal couches.)

But remaining upright is something I am more than willing to relearn if I can do it in communal glory, if once again I can sit with my fellow humans in venues that demand mutual respect of space as well as air. I can’t wait to find my seat on a subway, at a concert, in a theater. I long to improve my posture and abs with the bleacher seating workout so beloved by parents of basketball players.

But it may take some practice, which is yet another reason to go back to the movies: Restore your powers of concentrat­ion and improve your posture while watching films and eating popcorn. It will feel like you never left, and with any luck we will never have to leave again.

“Together Together,” I swear I will never forget.

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 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? LAEMMLE’S Playhouse theater in Pasadena is welcoming back audiences after more than a year, including one couple eager to resume their movie date nights.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times LAEMMLE’S Playhouse theater in Pasadena is welcoming back audiences after more than a year, including one couple eager to resume their movie date nights.

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