From The Grio — In a recent Saturday Night Live skit, Will Forte played a character named Hamilton, a racist ex-lover of “Precious” star and SNL guest host Gabourey Sidibe, who was desperately trying to win back her love. In an effort to prove that he has changed from his racist ways he mentions that he has seen her film “Precious” at the local Magic Johnson theater.
When Sidibe asked him if he liked the film, Forte’s character quipped, “The black audience was talking to the screen a lot, so I couldn’t understand 90 percent of it.”
The joke received some laughs on the small screen, but for many moviegoers, the stereotype of black folks talking in movie theaters is a serious reality — one that prompts some film buffs to choose carefully when it comes to movie venues.
Christy Harris is one such person. She has been waiting, like many moviegoers, for the arrival of Sex and the City 2. For Harris, a native of Atlanta, the film is a must-see event. So when the 32-year-old African-American elementary school teacher finally steps out to see it, she plans to head to a theater location that will draw a mainstream audience. To put it another way, Harris wants to be in a crowd with more white viewers because she believes that a whiter crowd of filmgoers translates into a quieter audience.
“I’m a Sex and the City fanatic,” says Harris. “To me it’s a social experience [but] when people talk a lot in the theater it annoys me.”
To be clear, Harris doesn’t believe that all blacks and or Latinos talk at the theater, but at the same time, she avoids going to the Cineplex in her old neighborhood where there is a predominately black movie-going audience. “There are some theaters that I would not go to [anymore],” adds Harris, “because there were kids there and they were loud.”
Roberto Guerrero, a 31-year-old nursing student, stopped going to one of the theaters in his hometown of Houston for virtually the same reasons as Harris. In fact, Guerrero says that if he doesn’t attend a matinee screening of a film, he expects to be interrupted by chatter or text messaging from other moviegoers. And like Harris, when Guerrero sits in a movie theater now, there is a great chance that he will be sitting with a mostly white audience nearby, which is what he tends to prefer at the movies.
Guerrero likes to attend the Angelika Film Center and Café in Houston, a theater chain that features art-house and independent style films. If there is talking during the film, before Guerrero identifies the culprit, he imagines them as younger and mostly likely, black.
“I avoid ghetto movie theaters, I used to go to those when I was younger, ” says Guerrero. “Usually I can tell if a black person is talking [at the movies]…that person probably doesn’t care what people think.”
At Inner City Entertainment Theaters on the South Side of Chicago, African-Americans make up about 90 percent of the audience. “I don’t have empirical data, but I would argue that a subset of African-Americans and Latinos talk to the screen on a regular basis,” says Chicago native Alisa Starks who co-owns the ICE Theaters Multiplex with her husband. However, she doesn’t believe that most blacks talk during a show.
She thinks that some movies encourage an interactive response from the audience. “Movies, good movies,” says Starks, “are designed to invoke emotion so people [respond but] that is not unique to African-Americans or Latinos or any other group. All groups can find themselves laughing or crying at the movies.”
(Continue Reading @ The Grio…)
I agree with many other posters that its far from race or even age specific. I get annoyed when anyone is talking or being rude in the movie theater but the only time I was driven to get he manager and report the issue was in a theatre full of white teens. I also once went to the movies during the day to avoid the young, wild adolescent crowd, and had the misfortune of being in the theatre with a group from the nursing home/senior center. They were loud as hell throughout the whole movie, lol.
American cinemas must be bad they way you all carry on. loool Anyway I just remembered when i went to NY i watched Meet the Browns in Time Sq so typically the film drew quite a black crowd. They were all quite young and obviously out to enjoy their Saturday night. Cut the story short they were quite loud with their chatter and laughter but the film was enjoyable and funny so it was understandable. Plus i was on holiday so that was my time to not let little things bother me.
Last movie I saw in a theater was Harry Potter and Goblet of Fire in a mostly black crowd that was alright. I didnt have a problem. But I dont even go theaters anymore. I enjoy watching movies at home.
The writer is right to choose the no stress, no fuss and no muss way to handle a situation and get what she wants her way — and that is to simply avoid frequenting certain areas.
I wholeheartedly agree it is an issue of class. It’s plain ol’ rude and straight up selfish to disrespect the rights of others who came to view a movie and did not pay to hear the loud talk, personal conversations and overall antics of those with little obvious home training, and disruptive patrons should be kicked out STAT!
I didn’t grow up in the hood and never lived there but a couple of my favorite cousins did. I loved sleep-overs and spending weekends with them but I don’t do PC bullshit and see no reason to avoid the elephant in the room that this type of behavior happens often in ‘hood theatres.
BLACK PEOPLE ARE LOUD IN MOVIES .PERIOD….so choose wisely where you spend your money to watch a movie ;-D
Now I know my peoples have been known to talk to the screen, but sorry, black folks are not the only loud ones in theaters. Personally, I avoid young people in general when choosing movie times.
LoL…I get up early and go when the senior citizens go.
I love movies and I am not trying to hear someone talking and trying to be seen when I am watching a film. I don’t care who you are or how old you are (that includes babies)
Nobody pays to hear unsolicited running commentary from a wanna-be comedian. Be considerate of others and shut the hell up.
It’s often traced back to how people are brought up to behave in large assembly like situations that influence how they behave in movie theaters. Perhaps the most influential crowd situation for blacks is church. Unlike most white churches, black churches are more “inter active”, encouraging a passionate sometimes vociferous response. Now go to an Episcopalian or Catholic neighborhood, I guarantee the the movie audiences are the complete opposite, in almost reverent silence during dialogue scenes. In Brooklyn, where I live the only other group that are as noisy as a black crowd are Hasidic Jews. They’ll ramble and comment from beginning to end. Now take a look at the feisty rambling at their temple services and it all makes sense.