ISSUE № 

11

a literary journal in multiple timezones

Nov. 2024

ISSUE № 

11

a literary journal in multiple timezones

Nov. 2024

Man, Alone At Movies

The Northeast
Illustration by:

Man, Alone At Movies

I am afraid of getting murdered at the movies. Allow me to rephrase: I am
afraid of getting murdered by men at the movies. Men are the ones who do
the murdering in movie theaters. Likely they are not the only ones who have
this impulse, but historically, they are the ones who are doing the
murdering at the movies.

In July of 2012, a man murdered 12 people and injured 70 others at a movie
theater in Aurora, Colorado. He wore a gas mask and a ballistic helmet. He
shot with a Remington 870 Express Tactical shotgun, a Smith & Wesson M&P15 Sport semi-automatic rifle with a 100-round drum magazine, and a .40-caliber
handgun. He listened to techno music so that he could not hear the
reactions of the people he killed, the sound a bullet makes when it tears
into flesh and sinew. His victims were between the ages of 6 and 51.

Three years later, in 2015, at a movie theater in Lafayette, Louisiana, a
man opened fire during a screening of a comedy, murdering three people and
injuring 9 others. Two women, ages 21 and 33, were his victims. The third
person killed—not a victim, just killed—was himself.

Here we are in 2018, and I am hoping men murdering at the movies is not a
triennial occurrence. I don’t know why men feel the need to murder people
in movie theaters. I don’t know many people who dislike the movies that
much, or dislike people that much, or feel the need to merge their dislike
of people with their dislike of the movies. But perhaps I don’t know that
many people. You can blame the female species for many things, but shooting
up movie theaters is not one of them. If you learn one thing from us, pay
no attention to our humility or our compassion or how we will always be
paid less than you. Take note that we are not killing people in movie
theaters. Try to heed this lesson.

I do not want to get murdered at the movies. I want to enjoy the movies. I
(and what feels like the rest of the human population) recently got
Moviepass, an app that, for $80 a year, allows you to see one movie per
day, every day. Living in New York, where a movie can run you anywhere
between $15 at Cinema Village East to $17.40 at Union Square Regal, this
feels like a dream.

I love movie theaters, even the worst things about them: the racketeering
on popcorn prices and the fact that you need to self-butter, the seats that
haven’t been cleaned in a questionable amount of time, being confined to
specific hours to see whatever it is you’ve chosen to see. I like the
experience of going through something with strangers.How will we feel? What
will we think? The we is different every time. So is what we endure, the
story that unfolds before us.

I saw every Oscar contender but one this year. During each of the eight
films, I held my breath the entire time. It seems to me that a lot of men
like carrying bags with them to the movies. I wish they didn’t. I stare at
their bags and try to make judgment calls on whether or not they could pack
an assault rifle in that backpack or that duffel bag. The problem is that I
have never seen an assault rifle in person, so the judgment is hard to
make.

I think there’s a pecking order of the right theaters in which to murder
people in, which is why I have a preference for the wrong ones, the indie
theaters. You can’t cause a lot of carnage in an indie theater because
niche films don’t give you a lot of bodies to aim at. This is why I like
the Angelika Theater in SoHo, or the IFC in the West Village. Boring
independent cinemas where you can’t get as much murdering accomplished.
You’d have to go elsewhere for that. When I do go elsewhere, I always
regret it.

Take for example last weekend, when I went to see the new Natalie Portman
movie. My boyfriend Will and I went to the 9:40 showing on Saturday night
at Cinema Village East. We sat down in the second tier of the theater and
were chatting when a man with a backpack sat down two seats to my right. I
began bouncing on my mental trampoline, jumping to all kinds of
conclusions. Will has a mind less wired at the timber of tragedy and did
not seem to notice, but then the movie started and this changed. The man
had all sorts of behaviors that made me certain the massacre he was
planning was imminent. For instance, his texting, which was rampant. To
check a phone in a movie is one thing, but to maintain a consistent
conversation—such as, with another sniper, or telling one’s mother in
another state that one is about to commit atrocity and he is sorry—is
egregious. Every time he took a sip of his drink, he groaned slightly. I
visualized this in headlines that would be published later: “He bought a
drink and a medium popcorn so as not to arouse suspicion.” At first, I
thought he might be masturbating to Natalie Portman, which felt less
offensive than the impulse to decimate. But he wasn’t masturbating. I knew,
because I was watching him instead of the movie. There was only one other
logical conclusion. He also wouldn’t stop touching that damn backpack,
reaching down and touching it every few minutes. To check on his rifles. I was certain of it.

The man became unbearable when, 40 minutes into the film, he stood up and
instead of shuffling past the two people on the end of his row in order to
go wherever it was he needed to go, he jumped beneath the bar on the second
tier and ran out of the theater. Jumping and running is appropriate in
cardio classes or parks. It is not appropriate in movie theaters. It can
only mean that one’s destination is to go get the guns he has stored in the
trash cans outside the theater or in the bathroom, return to the theater,
and end people’s lives, strangers with families and favorite foods and
feelings, who only wanted to go see this movie, who didn’t want to die.

This was when I turned to Will and said, “We need to move.” I typically get
a lot of pushback for my neuroses from my boyfriend but this was mercifully
not one of those times. We scrambled down the steps and walked to the far
left of the theater, right next to the exit. “Is this okay?” Will said.

There was a binder clip of fear, angular and obtrusive, fastened in my
throat but I said yes. From our vantage point, I could see the man’s empty
seat, and I could get out of the theater if I needed to. We sat. The man
came back into the theater without a gun. He got back in his seat and
resumed his incessant texting and backpack touching. This went on for about
three minutes, when Will turned to me and said, “Get out. We need to get
out.”

In that moment I did not think of why. I thought of my mother, who I had
not texted a final message of goodbye to, the draft of my swan song
thanking her for life on earth that I keep in the Notes section of my
phone, typically reserved for bad airplane turbulence when I purchase Wi-Fi
and pray. I got out. I ran. Will ran. We ran down the stairs and into the
lobby, to the door, when I turned to him and asked, breathless and shaking,
what he’d seen.

“That guy across the aisle from us.”

The guy across the aisle from us, it turned out, was another man sitting
alone with a backpack, also continually texting. I did not notice him
because I was too busy looking at the first man alone with the backpack,
but Will saw that when the second man would send a message, the first man’s
phone would light up. Two men, sitting alone and on separate sides of a
movie theater, each with a backpack. Why? We all have limits of what we are
willing to survive, and Will’s threshold was when the second man lifted his
phone to his ear and began to whisper into it. “I thought it was go time.”

So we stood there, holding each other’s trembling hands, and then we left
the theater. Yes I know—if you see something, say something. But what was
there to say? “Two men are sitting alone and likely texting each other.” It
sounds ridiculous. Not as ridiculous as the impetus to kill people in a
movie theater, but ridiculous nevertheless. We went and got a drink and on
our phones we kept updating the Google search: “Cinema Village East
shooting.” That’s how confident we were. The event became inevitable.

What struck me most was that, in relaying this story about not being
murdered, everyone I told said they were feeling the same way each time
they went to the movies recently. “We’re like sitting ducks,” said my
roommate Dana. I research the idiom for kicks: “Someone who waits
unsuspectingly for doom or destiny.” This feels right. Women are afraid of
being murdered by men. Men are afraid of being murdered by fellow men. This
is not what the human contract stipulates. I don’t know the terms and
conditions of it specifically, but I’d like to think there’s a rider of
some kind that says it’s not acceptable to murder at the movies. “Being a
person is getting too complicated,” writes Margaret Atwood in The Edible Woman. I think she was right.

Two nights later, I went back to Cinema Village East with my friend Trevor
to finish the Natalie Portman movie. I wanted to make it to the end. I’d
told Trevor about what happened on Saturday, and he was a good sport as we
sat in the movie theater, watching and commenting on men coming in, some of
them together, some of them alone, most of them with bags or backpacks. It
was 8 pm. Men should be allowed to carry bags filled with vestiges of their
lunches and papers and their wallets and whatever else they want and not be
scrutinized. I know they deserve that. But I also know I don’t deserve to
be killed when I go to the movies. I know that.

There was one man in particular I was anxious about. Trevor assured me,
when he pulled out a plastic container of mixed nuts, that if you were
about to shoot up a theater, you wouldn’t be eating almonds. For whatever
reason, this assuaged me. We watched the movie. We did not die.

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Frankie Allegra
Frankie Allegra is a California native currently living in New York City. Her essays have been published in The Briar Cliff Review and Prompt Literary Magazine (forthcoming in Blue Mesa Review). Her one-act play “The Auction” was performed in Vivarium Theatre Company’s Lost and Found Festival in Chicago. She is a graduate of Northwestern University's nonfiction program, where she studied under John Bresland and Eula Biss.