The weird thing is that I almost warned these last people. From now on we are going to tell people, "just so you know we have had a few complaints about that film."
Some of my favorite refund requests:
Anger Management:
"it was dumb."
Spellbound:
"it was about spelling!"
Waking Life:
"that movie sucked! What did you think of it?" I didn't have the heart to tell them it was my current favorite movie.
Beckinsale is almost always hot. that was not a plus for me, P-C.
My theater has Premonition, and every time I sell a ticket for it I want to tell them that it sucks and they shouldn't go see it.
Thankfully, no one asks for their money back when the movie only costs a dollar.
You can ask for your money back if you didn't like the film? Wow, I never thought to try that! House lights left on for the first ten minutes of the film--yes; broken film and delay of showing--yes; screwed-up sound system--yes. But not quality of film. Going to see a film or play is a risk of your cash; if it sucks, you're out of luck!
You can ask for your money back if you didn't like the film?
You can try. It wouldn't work with me but I would say that I was deeply sorry you didn't like the film and that in the future if you ask me about the movie you've chosen I will certainly give you my honest opinion.
You can ask for your money back if you didn't like the film?
It's our company's policy to offer a raincheck if you didn't like the movie, rather than money back.
You can ask for your money back if you didn't like the film?
I've never done that, though I did walk out of a movie during the opening credits and tell an usher I was switching to Not Another Teen Movie.
OK sorry for the blurriness but this is to settle a bet. Can anyone guess why four drunken eejits decided this was the best configuration for these posters?
well... it's a puzzle. What would make someone hang these posters in such an odd way?