353 posts
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Post by cirque on Dec 15, 2017 15:13:01 GMT
Fighting this morning NOT to overhear the next table conversation about the new Star Wars movie...wanting it to reveal next week as a complete surprise....isnt that the joy of discovery ?
Theatre facebook today......do you want to know the plot-here it is.........
Think I would rather discover than read in advance-whats the point if you know the end. ?
Hermoine wakes..........Hamlet Dies.........Wendy grows up.......be quiet.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 16, 2017 19:38:53 GMT
It's not the destination, it's the journey. I know how Hamlet's going to end, but I still want to see how they do it. Spoilers are the devil's work though. If someone wants to know the ending before they see something, let them find out for themselves with no judgment. But for heaven's sake don't tell people plot points unless they've specifically asked and you're unlikely to be overheard by unwitting others.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 17, 2017 7:34:08 GMT
Whenever I see Othello I somehow think that this time it might turn out ok; I'm internally shouting "don't give him the damn hankie, woman!". When I'm old and demented it will probably be out loud as well...
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5,707 posts
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Post by lynette on Dec 17, 2017 18:49:59 GMT
My dear Grandma used to give the endings of all the films she saw whether you asked or not so that kind of immunised me to knowing what happens. It is great if you go with someone to a Shakespeare and they don’t know the ending. Did that with Ofhello. Tears, tears... And yes, I know the ending of Hamlet but still love the surprises on offer such as the extra bit of script in the Almeida production and of course the way Gertrude dies. Would love a compilation movie of deaths of Gertrude. But I also love detective stories and movies and series. Currently watching Bosch on Amazon Prime. Really good and the 'endings' are very cleverly worked out.
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4,156 posts
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Post by kathryn on Dec 17, 2017 19:51:27 GMT
There is a special joy in going to see a Shakespeare play with someone who doesn’t know it at all. I saw the Jamie Lloyd/Martin Freeman RIII with someone who had never seen the play (or any Shakespeare) before and remember looking at the fish tank on stage and *knowing* she had no idea why it was there. She jumped!
Equally though very few plot details really spoil the experience of seeing something, or re-watching wouldn’t be a thing.
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1,743 posts
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Post by fiyero on Dec 17, 2017 20:04:48 GMT
You can only see something for the first time once. I hated that From Here to Eternity had a spoiler in the first scene, it just meant I was waiting for it all night (I had never seen the film or read the book). I guess they agreed as it was removed later in the run. I much preferred the later version but by then it was too late. I recently saw the new Murder on the Orient Express movie and a friend nearly spoiled it as she assumed I had seen at least one version before. I told her no spoilers before I told her I was seeing Witness for the Prosecution.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 17, 2017 20:34:15 GMT
There's a weird joy in both I find...Sometimes it's glorious to be totally ignorant, other times the 'ride' is equally enjoyable.
However I never have forgiven a friend for giving away the ending of a season of America's Next Top Model just before I got there haha
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5,159 posts
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Post by TallPaul on Dec 18, 2017 13:22:09 GMT
However I never have forgiven a friend for giving away the ending of a season of America's Next Top Model just before I got there Now you know how I feel about Miss Saigon!!!
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Post by Deleted on Dec 18, 2017 19:42:36 GMT
Now you know how I feel about Miss Saigon!!! I got half way through Miss Saigon before suddenly realising it was Madame Butterfly (which I had also seen) and I did a loud gasp out loud in the middle of a song when I realised I knew what was going to happen.
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