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Post by Ass_E9 on Sept 8, 2020 4:39:54 GMT
...boring, or just stick with it regardless?
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Post by ck100 on Sept 8, 2020 4:40:40 GMT
I stick with it if it's a movie I've never seen before.
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Post by darkreviewer2013 on Sept 8, 2020 4:44:36 GMT
I don't fast forward, but I allow my attention to wander.
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Post by CrepedCrusader on Sept 8, 2020 4:50:45 GMT
Occasionally I will, if I'm short on time.
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Post by femalefan on Sept 8, 2020 5:37:30 GMT
It depends on what the movie is.
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Post by Marv on Sept 8, 2020 5:49:20 GMT
If I’ve never seen it I don’t fast forward. If I have seen it i May skip ahead to better scenes.
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Post by Prime etc. on Sept 8, 2020 6:00:31 GMT
Yes, but rarely. I did it with King Kong 2005. Hey Tom Hanks Jr, I don't need a lecture on Joseph Conrad.
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Post by Feologild Oakes on Sept 8, 2020 8:19:40 GMT
No i don`t
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Post by theravenking on Sept 8, 2020 15:50:00 GMT
I usually give a movie 30 minutes, if it doesn't improve in that time I'll fast forward.
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Post by Raimo47 on Sept 8, 2020 16:17:28 GMT
I never fast forward anything. It would completely ruin the movie or an episode of a TV-show.
If a movie is too boring, I just quit watching it.
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Post by Catman 猫的主人 on Sept 8, 2020 16:19:19 GMT
No.
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Post by mikef6 on Sept 8, 2020 16:38:47 GMT
Even with a movie I am enjoying, I will FF through a musical montage or an extended walking or driving scene. I know that I only save a few seconds but I really get impatient when time is filled up with, well, filler.
On the other hand, I will sit through a good film that is, as they say, deliberately paced, without ever considering the remote.
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Post by HumanFundRecipient on Sept 8, 2020 20:37:40 GMT
I never fast forward anything. It would completely ruin the movie or an episode of a TV-show. If a movie is too boring, I just quit watching it. That's how my first viewing of A.I. Artificial Intelligence went. On the second viewing, I stuck through scene of the robot boy David being abandoned by his mother. My patience was rewarded.
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Post by rizdek on Sept 8, 2020 21:12:04 GMT
...boring, or just stick with it regardless? I haven't ever done that. If it gets too boring, I just stop watching it. I might pick it up later on and try again. Occasionally it turns out I like it after the slow part is over, but if you fast forward, it seems it would break up the story too much and it would never make sense.
BUT...for movies I watch a lot, If I have the digital version, I frequently edit them for various reasons.including to take out scenes I don't care to watch over and over, to reduce the volume of some scenes where it seems the volume wasn't adjusted well, and sometimes to add scenes. EG, I added in the deleted scenes to my version of Groundhog Day.
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Post by marth on Sept 8, 2020 21:14:50 GMT
Sometimes, only on rewatches.
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Post by CoolJGS☺ on Sept 8, 2020 21:36:43 GMT
I would never fast forward a movie I haven't seen
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Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Sept 8, 2020 22:08:44 GMT
Like most, only on rewatches. I don't have a problem skipping exposition scenes if I already know the information or just watching a good fight scene or car chase and skipping some of the buildup.
I spend more time rewinding films because I can't make out a bit of dialogue or I'll start thinking about something else and realize I've missed several minutes of the film.
I prefer streaming for this ability. In theaters, I usually have to watch a movie at least twice because sometimes my mind will drift and I risk not understanding something that happens later on.
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Post by rudeboy on Sept 9, 2020 2:16:46 GMT
Occasionally. More so as I get older. Long movies have no right to be boring, but so many of them are.
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