Why the matinee remains cinema's quiet pleasure
Oh, the magic of slipping into a cinema during the day, when the sun outside is staging its own sweaty matinee. You step from the
Oh, the magic of slipping into a cinema during the day, when the sun outside is staging its own sweaty matinee. You step from the glare into the hush, from the furnace into the air- conditioned cool. Suddenly, the world rearranges itself. The velvet darkness becomes a cocoon, with the screen as a portal.
You're no longer a citizen of this world, but a traveller in a universe that doesn't exist anywhere outside this hall. While rest of the world is busy being productive, you are gloriously idle, surrendering yourself to flickering illusions. The heat outside is forgotten, replaced by the chill of manufactured night, and the cool of a story unfurling before you.
There is something deliciously rebellious about this daytime escape. It's a refusal to sweat, to hustle, to acknowledge the tyranny of daylight. Inside, you are immersed in a narrative that demands no proof, returning calls or
emails - only belief. And when you finally emerge, blinking into the by-now weak sun, you carry with you the afterglow of a world that never was, yet feeling more real than the one waiting outside.