Advantages: Great value if you use it Disadvantages: Can be cheaper to pay as you go
may be able to do your viewing for less on a pay as you go.
But if you are a full-fee, evening viewing, film-hog who loves nothing more than to go into the cinema at 11 in the morning and come out 5 days later reeking of pop-corn and looking pale, this is the best bargain you'll ever get and it beats hiding in the toilets or behind the seats and sneaking between screens.
What can't you do with Unlimited?
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Normal customers (i.e. non-cardholders) can phone ahead or go online to book seats for big new releases. This would be handy if a blockbuster is coming out and you really want to see it. As far as I know, Unlimited card holders can't pre-book seats remotely but there's nothing to stop you popping in beforehand and getting your tickets at the cinema.
You can't transfer the tickets - well, in theory you ...
Advantages: Great facilities, great Unlimited deal Disadvantages: Expensive
to show some films in 3D.
VIP: Only at selected Cineworld Cinemas. A glass box with privately controlled sound system and between 12 - 20 seats.
Delux: Prices include extra-comfortable chairs with lots of leg room, arm rests, lift up and reclining seats, as well as bar service and reserved seating.
Movies for Juniors: £1 tickets for children and adults, Movies for Juniors shows 3 recent children's films on Saturday mornings. Check your local cinema for the weekly lineup.
Parking: There is off street parking close to most cinemas (except the Chelsea, Fulham road, Haymarket and Shaftesbury Avenue ones).
Disabled access: Wheelchair spaces, removable seats, ramps, lifts. This is not available at all cinemas, however, as some of the older cinemas cannot be modified, due to planning restrictions.
There is restricted ...
Advantages: Beautiful, artistic, accessible Disadvantages: Some may be put off by the subtitling
. A boy who became obsessed with the cinema and who, in turn made it his life. The mystique of the cinema remains to this day and, for this reason alone I think the film works. We can all empathise with the feelings yet still know nothing of the circumstance.
The culmination of the story sees us torn between sadness and pure joy as some of the best cinematic moments of years gone by are played in succession, a very irreverent freeing of the soul.
The characterisation in the film is first class, the only weakness perhaps being the adult Salvatore (or Toto) with whom we get little opportunity to know. The direction and acting serve to draw the audience into the story and you genuinely feel part of the action. That you finish the film wondering just what has passed in the preceding 2 hours is, I think, testament to the quality ...