Monday, March 10, 2008

Dinner and a Show? See a Loan Officer First.

It had been a long week: work, school, our son's rehearsals, our own performances, and battling seasonal health crud. We'd hardly seen the kids. They'd pretty much taken care of themselves for the past week. As a reward to them for being so helpful and responsible, and as a treat for ourselves, we decided to go to a silly movie and have dinner out.

First stop, the movie theater to buy our tickets in advance. For three adults and one child, $33.00! $33.00 for four people to gather with other people in a large darkened room and view celluloid being run past a lightbulb. Buy popcorn and four drinks, and the theater doubles their take.

If that weren't bad enough, we decided to have dinner out as a family. Something we hadn't done for weeks. Since California Pizza Kitchen was walking distance from the theater, we figured that was as good a place as any. Monkey Dude ordered the Thai Chicken Pizza, Spaghetti Bolognese for Avindair, Fettucini Alfredo for Adventure Girl, and some veggie-filled pasta thing for me. Add in four soft drinks. Wanna guess the total? The bill came to over $60.00. With tip, what we would consider a not at all fancy dinner, totaled over $80.00. Tell me that isn't highway robbery.

Granted, the prices were on the menus... I guess none of us thought about it as we ordered. But we'd been there before and didn't have to choke on the bill. No doubt that the prices have gone up. Considerably.

So, dinner and movie out for a family of four was over $100.

It's no wonder that home theaters are booming. Families can't afford to go out any more. When I was a kid, a movie was inexpensive entertainment. (A generation before, for my parents, even more so. Or should I say "less"?) Mom would drop me off at the theater with a friend and about $5. We'd have enough for admission, a drink, and a treat - with change left over. Now, if the kids want to go to a show with a friend, I practically have to fork over a $20. Am I the only one who thinks that's nuts?

Every family has something that they love to do. We are a movie-loving family. It's our thing. But from now on, with very few exceptions, movies are going to be at home, matinee only (because that's expensive enough), or at the cheap $2.00 theater.

Dining out, which had become less frequent as it was, will also become a rare event. Groceries prices have gone up, too, but I can feed my entire family a meal for the cost of one plate at a restaurant. I'd rather sit around the house eating bologna sandwiches with Avindair and kids, playing a board game, than shell out the geld for something like that again.

In fact... that sounds pretty damn good!

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yeah, WTF with the matiness prices? At the Regal Beagle in Eagn, the price is only fifty cents less than the tickets after 5pm. Huh???

And the medium coke/medium popcorn special? $12.

$12?!?! On top of a reduced ticket price of $8.50? Screw that.

But, if you want to see a cheap new movie go to the Uptown theater. They show indie movies and if you get their early shows (1pm) are $6. Except that I saw "Atonement" which sucked. So I guess I really didn't get ahead.

Well, back to boycotting the movie theaters. I feel liberated.

GeekGoddess said...

Well, back to boycotting the movie theaters. I feel liberated.

Ha! I know what you mean. Hell, there are so many other ways to see a movie these days:
- On Demand
- Netflix (both snail mail and Web-based)
- Traditional rental
- A smattering of "cheap" theaters (an endangered species)

So we can't get first-run movies through those venues. Okay. Not a biggie. You'd think that with all the competition out there, traditional movie theaters would do their best to compete. Not so. I'm guessing that with Americans holding on to their pocketbooks a little more tightly, movie theaters are going to really start feeling the pinch soon.

Avindair said...

'rie --

Regal Beagle?

Wasn't that the name of the bar in "Three's Company"?

GeekGoddess said...

YES! It was!

The 70's-fu is strong with this one.