You can almost never reach this fantasy of someone else getting the same dopamine boost from some piece as you did. It happens spontaneously and each person gets tickled by different things. Best not to stress about it.
When you get that moment where the other person understands and is on the same wavelength as you is glorious though!
6 of us (siblings) watched The Lord of the Rings together on opening weekend. I’ll never forget us all standing outside after the movie staring at each other, stunned like “o m g what did we just see?!” Then we went out to eat and it was 2 hours of “did you see that part?! Did you see this part!?” I’ll never forget it.
I like the first one and the last one, but I simply cannot make it through the two towers. I tried reading the book, and I had to give up, and it’s one of the few books I’ve ever quit reading in my life.
Just the infinite rambling about the hills and the trees and the trees and the hills and the hills and the trees and they stop to eat and sing and then the hills and the trees and the trees and the hills, it makes my brain revolt and threaten to start throwing molotovs.
And the first three quarters of the movie was so boring to me that if my girlfriend at the time had not been there to make out with me in the drive in I would have lost it.
Totally understandable. We all were infatuated with the books in the 80’s and 90’s, so to have someone visually put our imaginations on a big screen like that was orgasmic.
My first experience with this was when I was young and watched a Monty Python episode with my father, thinking that since we shared a sense of humor it would hit him the same way it did me. Apparently we shared some types of humor, but the combination of British higher level comedy satire mixed with absurbism didn’t hit well, and he found nothing at all funny. Which now I’m fine with including him not pretending to get it, but as a kid it really stung to expect a connection that totally failed.
From then on when sharing stuff I try to just put it out there and not force anything to happen. The last experience was on vacation at a hotel with my wife. One of the nights I saw The Big Short on the movie selection and suggested we watch it. I just introduced it as a dark comedy documentary about the 2008 crash and it had Steve Farrel, and let her watch without expectation or prompting of moments. I was really pleased when not only did she understand and enjoy it during the watch, but asked questions and we talked about it afterwards. Now, yeah, she’s my long time wife, but that doesn’t means things often click like that as we are different people with different viewpoints and taste, so it was definitely a wonderful experience to have that kind of feedback.
Man I love introducing my son to new movies or my favorites and him getting excited like me. We are going to see Jaws in theaters next week. I am excited.
You can almost never reach this fantasy of someone else getting the same dopamine boost from some piece as you did. It happens spontaneously and each person gets tickled by different things. Best not to stress about it.
When you get that moment where the other person understands and is on the same wavelength as you is glorious though!
6 of us (siblings) watched The Lord of the Rings together on opening weekend. I’ll never forget us all standing outside after the movie staring at each other, stunned like “o m g what did we just see?!” Then we went out to eat and it was 2 hours of “did you see that part?! Did you see this part!?” I’ll never forget it.
I can never enjoy LOTR for some reason. Brain just doesn’t like it, oh well. It just like with food, different people like different things.
I like the first one and the last one, but I simply cannot make it through the two towers. I tried reading the book, and I had to give up, and it’s one of the few books I’ve ever quit reading in my life.
Just the infinite rambling about the hills and the trees and the trees and the hills and the hills and the trees and they stop to eat and sing and then the hills and the trees and the trees and the hills, it makes my brain revolt and threaten to start throwing molotovs.
And the first three quarters of the movie was so boring to me that if my girlfriend at the time had not been there to make out with me in the drive in I would have lost it.
Totally understandable. We all were infatuated with the books in the 80’s and 90’s, so to have someone visually put our imaginations on a big screen like that was orgasmic.
That was like so along ago… before I was even born lol
My first experience with this was when I was young and watched a Monty Python episode with my father, thinking that since we shared a sense of humor it would hit him the same way it did me. Apparently we shared some types of humor, but the combination of British higher level comedy satire mixed with absurbism didn’t hit well, and he found nothing at all funny. Which now I’m fine with including him not pretending to get it, but as a kid it really stung to expect a connection that totally failed.
From then on when sharing stuff I try to just put it out there and not force anything to happen. The last experience was on vacation at a hotel with my wife. One of the nights I saw The Big Short on the movie selection and suggested we watch it. I just introduced it as a dark comedy documentary about the 2008 crash and it had Steve Farrel, and let her watch without expectation or prompting of moments. I was really pleased when not only did she understand and enjoy it during the watch, but asked questions and we talked about it afterwards. Now, yeah, she’s my long time wife, but that doesn’t means things often click like that as we are different people with different viewpoints and taste, so it was definitely a wonderful experience to have that kind of feedback.
Man I love introducing my son to new movies or my favorites and him getting excited like me. We are going to see Jaws in theaters next week. I am excited.
An often undervalued part of the experience is who you’re watching it with.