Date nights are a precious thing once you have kids. Ask any parent. It's not just about having the energy to do it. A lot of planning is involved. If you both have busy careers, it's about coordinating schedules and -- more importantly -- booking that babysitter well in advance.
My husband and I were long overdue for some one-on-one time. So I was super excited that I was able to get a sitter for both Friday and Saturday nights. We didn't have anything crazy planned. We were looking forward to checking out two hot, new restaurants and catching a couple flicks that everyone else but us had seen.
Both nights, the food was fantastic. The wine was great. The movies, well, not so much. And it wasn't because of the actors, directors, or storylines. Nope, our rare double-header was ruined by kids -- somebody else's kids.
At both movies (Hunger Games the first night, The Avengers the next) there were babies and toddlers in the theater. Crying babies and singing toddlers to be exact. Everyone was beyond annoyed.
More from The Stir: A Movie Theater Is No Place for a Baby
It's not like we were watching a Disney film or some other animated flick you'd expect a whole family to attend. No, these were violent, action packed scenes. But to be honest, the inappropriate subject matter is not what I take issue with. (I remember being horrified when I saw a dad come into a screening of Precious with three kids under 10 and these movies were nowhere near as sexually explicit).
I have a problem with the fact that some parents don't care if they ruin the film for everybody else. There was crying, whining, and at some point I swear I heard a verse if a Barney song. I kept trying to will them to get up and leave. They didn't.
Now as a parent I sympathize with the desperate need to get out of the house and engage in some kind of activity that has nothing to do with Play-Doh or The Fresh Beat Band. And babysitters are expensive. But is it fair to spoil the film for other patrons?
When I can't find a sitter (which is often), I stay at home and rent a movie from cable or Netflix. Why can't everyone offer the same consideration? At the very least, they should exit when the wailing starts. These parents threw out a couple of "shhhs" but otherwise seemed relatively unconcerned, just staring at the screen as if it wasn't bothersome.
I've read message boards where parents have discussed the best time to take their tot to a movie, trying to sync it up with the sleeping schedule. But come on. Does that ever really work? What baby is going to stay asleep while the Hulk screams and pounds his way through a two-hour film?
Should parents bring babies into movies that are not for children? Is it rude to other moviegoers?
Image via Max Wolfe/Flickr


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Comments 96
i dont go to movies with my child. just like you i find it rude especially when they dont take the child out when it becomes way to noisy. i dont think its fair and i hate it when it happens.
Fortunately, I have never experienced noisy or unruly children in a movie theater. However, my sister and I once went to a theater, and we were both appalled when a couple came in and sat right in the front row with a baby who could not have been more than a month old. With children that young, my concern is not "Great, that kid is going to cry the whole time", but rather "Are you trying to damage his brand new ears?!"
Never ever appropriate. Ditto texting, checking your phone, explaining the plot line to your idiot date who can't keep up. I feel blessed that I live in Austin Texas where we have Alamo Drafthouse. This independent theatre chain doesn't allow children under age 6 except on Tuesday afternoon 'baby matinees' and will kick out anyone who talks, texts or otherwise disturbs the movie for the other patrons
I especially hate it when my husband and I go to the trouble of getting someone to sit with the kids, specifically pick a later showtime (say 9 or 11) so that hopefully most children are home in the bed (like ours), and pick a PG-13 or R rated movie; then you get there to a theater with kids that have not been taught how to respect others, or worse than that, watching a completely innappropriate movie for their age. I have absolutely no problem with parents who bring a nursing infant, because they are easily consolable.
Personally, I wish that 9 and 11 o clock showings would not have children's tickets available. I also wish that they were never available for movies that are rated R. I'm like the author, I rarely get date nights, but when I do I certainly don't want to spend those nights listening to someone else's kids. I want to spend that time bonding with my husband and falling in love with him all over again.
I took my oldest DD to the movies a few times when she was an infant, mainly because I could always calm and quiet her down with breastfeeding. But once she became a toddler we started going to the children's movies only because I don't expect a toddler to behave during a movie she's not interested in and I wouldn't take her to an age innappropriate movie anyways.
this is why I love living within reasonable distance of a drive in. It makes for a late night, with the back-to-back features...but my DH and I get to watch two movies, we don't have to worry about childcare and if our toddler acts up, we can roll up the windows and turn on the AC. To be honest, sometimes her comments make it an awesome outing - take Avengers: things crashing and banging and as the dust settles you hear a little voice go "uh oh"