Watching movies when the suspense of disbelief has been broken

I’ve said before that one thing I can’t let go is when, upon hearing a recording of the call to 911 from the night of the murder or whatever, somebody will weigh in like an authoritative voice of experience: nobody’s that good an actor.

Pulls me right out of the story: I know someone is that good an actor; he’s right there! And he’s not even that good an actor! You’ve just reminded me that he’s one of them there actor-type fellas, when you insisted that his acting (a) wasn’t acting, and (b) couldn’t have been acting – and I just remembered that he’s never yet won an Emmy or an Oscar; and I just concluded that he ain’t gettin’ it for this!

“Nobody could fake that.” Man, don’t make me ask! Not while he’s faking it!

It bugged me that several times in Tim Burton’s original 1989 Batman movie the newspaper headlines used British spellings (it was mostly shot at Pinewood Studios in the UK). Is Gotham City in the UK?

yes?

I dunno. That village seems to lack the city canyons and vertiginous heights necessary for costumed superheroes to use to their advantage in fighting crime. It’s hard to look down from the heights when the heights are only a few storeys up.
Not that the comics have been ignoring the place. From your own cite:

I sincerely thought it referred to the train!:eek:

Sometimes it gets me the other way.

Say with a show like Elementary, where you’re solving the case at the same time as the characters, and they interview someone and you the viewer can see they are lying, or have the wrong affect for what they are feeling. But you as the viewer wonder if that is a clue, or if the actor is just bad.

Yeah, it’s hard to believe some schmo could have slipped through the security of a secret desert base and made off with such large objects connected with a top-secret psy-op. :wink: