Do they always give out more tickets than there are seats available for a screening? |
spunky Jul 02, 2008 @ 02:07 am
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buppie215 Jul 02, 2008 @ 05:07 am
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| in a word...
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| Yes.
They want to make sure that there is a full house, so on average they give out about 30% more tickets than they have seats to accommodate. |
Cayos Jul 03, 2008 @ 01:07 am
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| Of Course!
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| I actually went to a screening where they didn't have enough people and the screening ran 45 minutes late. I think it's because it was at a crappy movie theatre. But they did give us free popcorn, drinks, and these health bars. After that, I kinda understand why they give so many passes out. |
Angel128 Jul 03, 2008 @ 03:07 pm
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| It Seems So
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| I went to a screening of "Wanted" last week and was told their wasn't any seats left! Fortunately the manager allowed my party of 4 to come back to the next showing at no charge! |
Brian Jul 03, 2008 @ 05:07 pm
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| Full House
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| Yeah, because the studio is paying for the theater, they always want it to be full. The best bet is to just make sure to arrive early. Typically at least 1 hour early. If its a super popular movie, plan for extra time. |
yohannis Jul 04, 2008 @ 04:07 pm
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| Yes
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| I was at a Hancock screening last week that had too many people. Fortunately for those in the back of the line, the theater let those that couldn't get into the screening see any other movie that was showing that night free of charge, but that is at the discretion of the theater.
Also keep in mind that most of these screenings have tickets available through multiple sources, not just through Film Metro. |
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