![]() Most of it is restrained giggling behind schoolgirl hands (you have to rent a pair if you’re not a schoolgirl). ![]() Japanese people don’t tend to laugh out loud. The main difference of seeing a movie in a Japanese theater is the humor aspect. Our film was in English with Japanese subtitles. Second, you don’t have that deep booming movie guy doing voice-overs for the trailers. Which meant that in a theater room with a capacity of around 275, Lance, me, and the other ten people were all sitting in the same little square area. First of all, you buy tickets for specific seats. Let me briefly fill you in on what a movie experience is like at a theater there. Sure, we toured around and saw temples and monks and those incredibly zany Japanese TV commercials (I think their cardinal rule is “Anything Can Be Made Into A Cute Cartoon Transforming Robot Poké-Alien Mascot”), but that’s all secondary when it comes to movies. Justin’s review: I finally got to see this movie in Japan while visiting my friend Lance. Justin’s rating: I wish I had two heads so I could have watched it twice for the first time
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