Anonymous wrote:An important distinction is whether or not this dispute happens before the movie starts, or after. If the movie hasn't started yet, they should honor your request that they move. If the movie has aleeady begun, you're late and are interrupting. Go find some other unoccupied seat. That is fitting consequences for being that late.
Anonymous wrote:"Oops...I think we've had a mixup. Our tickets say Seats 9H, I, and J. Can you check your tickets to be sure we have the right seats?"
I allows for "mistakes," and correction.
For the most part, I can't imagine someone not responding. And I think you did the right thing, OP, by just sitting on the other side of the other 2 seats you had reserved. Sure, you could have escalated...but why??? Over one seat??
(I would assume that someone who just sat there was either not all there OR had a much different temperament than I did. I'm not interested in getting into some sort of weird altercation with an unpredictable stranger at a movie theatre. In this case, I'd pick my battles. If that makes me lack a backbone, so be it.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An important distinction is whether or not this dispute happens before the movie starts, or after. If the movie hasn't started yet, they should honor your request that they move. If the movie has aleeady begun, you're late and are interrupting. Go find some other unoccupied seat. That is fitting consequences for being that late.
Disagree because you'll then be sitting in someone else's seat. The last movie I went to, the theater was mostly sold out, but was half empty by the time the previews started playing. It eventually filled up, people were late because of long lines at concessions.
Anonymous wrote:An important distinction is whether or not this dispute happens before the movie starts, or after. If the movie hasn't started yet, they should honor your request that they move. If the movie has aleeady begun, you're late and are interrupting. Go find some other unoccupied seat. That is fitting consequences for being that late.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the theatre isn't packed, we just sit wherever. It's an $8 ticket. Nobody cares. Only the movie theatres seem to like this assigned seating.
If the place is packed then say "Oh, I think this is my seat, but maybe I'm confused - what does your ticket say?"
What? No, you don't just sit wherever. Then you'll end up sitting in some other person's seat.
If you arrive to your assigned seats and someone is sitting there, you simply say "Excused me. I believe these are our seats." And show them your tickets. If they do not move or respond, then you get someone who works at the theater.
And we sure do care. We chose the seats we wanted for a reason.
You don't say "I think" or "I believe."
Be more direct. "Excuse me. You are sitting in our seats." Not "I think you are" or "I could be wrong" or "I believe you are." Just "you are."
I'm the PP you are responding to. Someone was "direct" to me at the last movie I attended and they were in fact wrong. They "believed" I was in their seat but they had the seat numbers wrong. There's nothing wrong with being polite throughout the interaction.