What were they checking on the IDs? Age?
Thor is PG-13 so it seems an odd movie to be checking IDs for. The only ones I might question are small children who are there without an adult. And I don’t know many pre-teens that carry IDs.
I’ve only been carded at the movies once, and it was for a movie with sexually explicit content. (Shortbus.) I ended up not having to show my ID because when the ticket taker realized I was with a guy friend who looked his age, she was all, “Oh, it’s fine, you’re with him.” So in effect he was my parent or guardian. (I was about 22 and he was 23, but I’ve always looked young.) That story has always amused the hell out of me.
I guess didn’t mind them checking, I would have shown mine. I just didn’t have the patience to wait for 20 more people to not have their ID out and to question why it was needed.
When I finally left, the guy in the front of the line was trying to get 3 tickets. Not all the people he was going in with were there. She explained she needed to see all IDs. It was nearly an Abbot and Costello routine. After a lot of back and forth he finally said: Fine, I’ll have one ticket. She was confused, because there was a woman standing with him. The woman already had a ticket. It went back and forth some more and he said, just *one *ticket please. And she said, I need to see ID. And I said: Of for fuck’s sake.
Once upon a time I was the only eighteen year old in my group of friends, and we all wanted to see Starship Troopers. I tried to buy three tickets on my own an hour in advance, but they hit me with the three tickets = three IDs. I knew a guy who worked in a neighboring department store, so I found him and borrowed his. I got number three from a friend’s mom that lived nearby. It worked. There was nothing they could say.
Years before that, a friend’s dad drooped us off to see Speed, but we were both carded and too young. His dad had already driven off. I quickly scanned the lobby and saw a lone middle-aged guy just outside the glass smoking out front on the sidewalk. I said, “c’mon, our dad just dropped us off, and he knows we want to see Speed.” My friend was half Korean with some African American in there too, and meanwhile I’m as Irish as Danny Boy, but magic happened and I caught the smoker’s eye, and I waved and gestured towards the box office worker as if to say, “See, Dad. I knew it’d be a problem.” The smoker did what you do when caught off guard by a strange wave, he waived back. We got in.
I was about 14 when I saw Under Siege, accompianied only by a cousin a year older than I (and neither of us really looked like we could be 18). The theater didn’t give a damn.
Carding for a PG13, I really can’t understand at all. The rating doesn’t even mean “under 13 not allowed” to begin with: It’s really just a recommendation. And very few under 13s are going to be going to a movie without an adult, anyway.
That is bizarre. I think the only time I was ever carded at the movies was when I saw Johnny Mnemonic when I was around 15. My friend’s dad ended up having to come to the ticket window with us to get the tickets.
I can’t imagine why, or indeed how, you’d card for a PG-13 movie. It was occasionally brought up by one of my more anal-retentive, idiotic co-workers, but denied on the grounds that A) PG-13 is a guideline, not a rule like R is, and B) What does a 14 year old use for ID? They don’t have driver’s licenses, and young teens having passports isn’t really common (in this neck of the woods, at least).
I have never heard of being carded for a PG-13 movie. And, as far as I know, all you need to get into a rated R movie is to have an adult with you. In some places you don’t even need that–you can get a card saying your parents okayed it.
Either this is some sort of mistake or a rather stupid owner.
How could they possibly check IDs for a PG-13 movie? Why would a 13 year old even have an ID, and anyway the PG-13 rating doesn’t mean ‘anyone under 13 not admitted without a parent’ like the R rating.
I’ve never heard of such a thing before. Most big blockbuster movies are rated PG-13 specifically *because *all ages, and especially young teenagers, can get in to see them and hence spend more money.
The only time I can recall being “carded” at a movie was at a showing of the South Park movie. I was like 30 at the time, so it seemed kinda dumb. But in general, I could see why they would be concerned kids would go see it.
The only other thing I can think of is that it could be a badly thought-out attempt to discourage would-be bootleggers, but I can’t figure out how that would work.