電影院用英語(yǔ)怎么說(shuō)
電影院是為觀眾放映電影的場(chǎng)所,電影在產(chǎn)生初期,是在咖啡廳、茶館等場(chǎng)所放映的。那么你知道電影院用英語(yǔ)怎么說(shuō)嗎?下面跟學(xué)習(xí)啦小編一起學(xué)習(xí)關(guān)于電影院的英語(yǔ)知識(shí)吧。
電影院英語(yǔ)說(shuō)法
cinema
movie theater
電影院的英語(yǔ)例句
爸爸剛出門(mén),那男孩就跑向電影院。
As soon as his father went out, the boy ran to the cinema.
他偷偷溜進(jìn)了電影院而沒(méi)有被人逮著。
He stole into the cinema without being caught.
電影院不遠(yuǎn),你可以走到那去。
The cinema is not far, you can get there on foot.
我和女友是電影院的???。
My girlfriend and I are habitual cinema-goers.
電影結(jié)束后,人們從電影院蜂擁而出。
The crowd swarmed out of the cinema after the film ended.
電影院附近有一個(gè)電話亭。
There is a telephone booth near the cinema.
當(dāng)我們走進(jìn)電影院時(shí),燈熄滅了。
The light went out just as we entered the cinema.
電影院的大廳里有個(gè)小賣部。
There is a snack bar in the lobby of the movie theatre.
我們及時(shí)進(jìn)了電影院,趕上電影的開(kāi)場(chǎng)。
We entered the theater just in time to see the beginning of the movie.
影迷們坐在黑漆漆的電影院里看得如癡如醉。
The fans sat enthralled in the darkened cinema.
你要跟誰(shuí)一起去電影院?
Who're you going to the pictures with?
這座電影院虧空50萬(wàn)英鎊。
The theatre is £ 500,000 in the red.
相對(duì)來(lái)講,這個(gè)國(guó)家?guī)缀鯖](méi)有幾家電影院。
The country has relatively few cinemas.
在電影院門(mén)口售票。
Tickets are sold at the entrance to the cinema.
他們計(jì)劃明年建造一座電影院。
They plan to fabricate a cinema next year.
電影院是個(gè)娛樂(lè)場(chǎng)所。
A cinema is a place of entertainment.
盡管各地興建了越來(lái)越多的電影院,但是可供演員和導(dǎo)演進(jìn)行學(xué)習(xí)的院校卻少得可憐。
And even though more theaters are being built, there are few institutes where actors and directors can study.
我們現(xiàn)在正處在家庭錄像大行其道的時(shí)代,這對(duì)國(guó)內(nèi)的電影院來(lái)說(shuō)似乎是個(gè)關(guān)乎生死存亡的關(guān)鍵時(shí)刻。
It looks like high noon for the nation's movie theaters, now we are in the age of the home video.
保琳在電影院呆了三個(gè)小時(shí),她不愿意回家再面對(duì)她的丈夫。
Pauline spent three wretched hours at the cinema dreading the moment when she must go home and face her husband again.
關(guān)于電影院的英文閱讀:電影院里的騙局
in 2013, china achieved a record-breaking high for its film industry's box-office revenues, which officially register at 21.769 billion yuan (.59 billion). but according to wang changtian, ceo of enlight, that was at least 5 billion yuan short of the real number. other experts put the gap at 2.4 billion, explaining the reported box-office figure at 10 percent less than the real one. that gap is someone's windfall, illegally pocketed by cinema owners and operators, professionally known as film exhibitors. and the regulating agency is getting tough on this kind of theft.
wang changtian has reasons to be angry. over the lunar new year season that has recently wound down, he received on his microblog numerous audience reports, complete with photos, of tickets to dad, where are we going?, a runaway hit his company distributes. the tickets had no movie title printed on them or the prices printed were lower than what was actually paid by the moviegoers - all signs that the movie's revenues were not correctly registered.
the earliest manifestation of the shady practice of "box-office stealing" loomed a few years ago when individual moviegoers posted suspicious tickets online. tickets of this type usually had movie title "a" computer-printed on it, but the printed title was scratched out by hand and title "b" written in. fingers were pointed at the producer or distributor of title a, but more likely it was the movie theater that was behind it. the reason could be simple: film a gives the exhibitor a larger share of the revenue than film b.
however, this is just the tip of the iceberg. industry insiders reveal it was much worse before computer systems were installed in the nation's cinemas, and of course, before social media websites turned everyone into a potential reporter of such business deceit. as a matter of fact, some cinema investors were not even aware that they had to split their revenue with other parties. "this phenomenon started from the age of planned economy," says mao yu, deputy director of the film bureau, a branch of the regulating agency.
but it may have turned from guerrilla tactics to larger-scale con games. for group purchases, violators would not even issue tickets, essentially not reporting a single cent of revenue from a whole screening. since a representative of the group usually deals with the cinema, unless he or she specifically demands a printed ticket for each member of the group, all of them would be in the dark about income reporting from the cinema to the distributor.
another trick lies in membership dues, which are often collected up front. when a paid member reimburses for a ticket, it may have only the screening room on it, and the exhibitors can choose to credit it to any movie they like, or not to any movie, in which case they pocket 100 percent of the revenue.
some cinemas would go as far as investing in a separate point-of-sale computer system so that each ticket buyer gets the right ticket, but none of the data shows up on the centralized system. instead, another set of credible purchase data would be put in the correct system, but with lower attendance.
both distributors and exhibitors that i spoke to agree that cheating is much less rampant than before, say a dozen years ago, and now is mostly limited to third and fourth-tier cities. china film group, the nation's largest film production and distribution company, heads a consortium with several major private companies that hires 1,000 people to monitor cinemas nationwide, and huaxia, another state-owned company, has a smaller army of 800.
however, there are situations even these sharp-eyed monitors can do little about. for example, if a cinema sells a ticket for 80 yuan, which is normal for primetime, but gives away a free popcorn, it may attribute as much as 60 yuan of the ticket price to the popcorn, leaving only 20 as the ticket price. but it can argue that 20 yuan is the minimum price for this particular film agreed upon by both sides and therefore it does not violate any rule.
a similar scheme was employed when transformers 3 was bundled with yang shanzhou, a very small film with little box-office potential, making the latter into a strange film with eye-popping revenue (79 million yuan) but disproportionately fewer people who actually bothered to see it. there were sporadic online complaints about the practice even though consumers did not pay more for the package deal.
the state administration of press, publication, radio, film and television, the regulating agency, announced measures in late january to curb under-reporting and cheating on box-office revenues. a special fund is set up to subsidize the upgrading of computer software at point of sale. the current system was installed in 2005 and "cannot keep up with the new situation", in the words of jiang tao, director of the fund. "the new system will fix loopholes and shorten the reporting window to only 10 minutes after a sale is made instead of waiting till next noon, which is the current reporting lapse in time, which leaves room for manipulation. the national platform will be ready by may and the cinema side will complete their upgrading by october."
apart from putting a stamp of authorization on all sales systems, sapprft insists that all film tickets carry correct prices and movie admission. but conspicuously absent are concrete penalties for violations. the software upgrade will certainly be a great help, admit distributors and exhibitors, but it may not be enough.
"the cost of violation is still too low. if you're caught under-reporting 10 tickets, all you need to do is make up for the shortfall," says huang ziyan, vice-president of le vision pictures in charge of sales.
cao yong, a manager with the huaxing ume cinema chain, suggests that violators should have their business license revoked. "cinemas invest tens of millions of yuan and, with punishment of this severity, it would not make sense for them to steal 80,000 or 100,000 yuan from the box office."
other ideas have been floated such as the use of an infra-red camera that automatically scans a movie theater for attendance. the technology has been available for eight or nine years and it claims to have 95 percent accuracy. but it has never been put into use.
filmmakers are reluctant to stand firm when they become victims because they do not want to offend the exhibition branch of the business chain - the branch that deals directly with end users. some say they are no longer sad at the irregularity, but have come to the stage of despair.
this time it's for real, and "we'll cleanse the industry of this illegal and irregular behavior", says zhang hongsen, director of sapprft's film bureau.
2013年,中國(guó)電影行業(yè)票房收入創(chuàng)下歷史新高,據(jù)官方統(tǒng)計(jì),收入達(dá)217.69億元人民幣(35.9億美元)。據(jù)光線傳媒總裁王長(zhǎng)田透露,這一數(shù)字比實(shí)際數(shù)字少了至少50億元。還有專家認(rèn)為二者之間相差24億元,票房上報(bào)數(shù)字與實(shí)際數(shù)字之間相差至少10%。其中的差額,進(jìn)了一些人的腰包,成為了放映方,即影院所有人和經(jīng)營(yíng)者的非法收入。監(jiān)管機(jī)構(gòu)開(kāi)始對(duì)此類事件進(jìn)行嚴(yán)肅管理。
王長(zhǎng)田的氣憤是有理由的。在剛剛結(jié)束的春節(jié)檔期,他的微博上收到許多觀眾留言,并附上電影《爸爸去哪兒》的電影票照片。這部電影是光線傳媒公司發(fā)行的熱門(mén)影片。有的電影票上沒(méi)有電影的名字,而一些電影票上標(biāo)出的價(jià)格要低于觀眾實(shí)際購(gòu)票的價(jià)格。這些都說(shuō)明上報(bào)的電影收入并不真實(shí)。
幾年以前,就有觀眾將可疑的電影票上傳到網(wǎng)上,那時(shí)候就出現(xiàn)了“偷票房”的惡劣行為。電腦打出的電影票上往往標(biāo)記為a電影,但后來(lái)被涂改成b。有人指責(zé)a電影出品人和發(fā)行人,而幕后的操作者更有可能是影院方面的人員。原因很簡(jiǎn)單。相比b電影而言,放映方從a影片中得到的收入更多。
但這只是冰山一角。業(yè)內(nèi)人士透露,在中國(guó)電影院尚未安裝電腦系統(tǒng),社交網(wǎng)站還沒(méi)有讓所有人都成為此類商業(yè)騙行的潛在報(bào)道者之前,這類事件要更加嚴(yán)重。事實(shí)上,部分電影投資者甚至根本不知道,其他人在分享他們的收入。電影監(jiān)管機(jī)構(gòu)、國(guó)家新聞出版廣電總局電影局副局長(zhǎng)毛羽說(shuō),"計(jì)劃經(jīng)濟(jì)時(shí)代就出現(xiàn)了這種現(xiàn)象"。
但是,這已經(jīng)從零散的現(xiàn)象,變成了規(guī)模巨大的騙局。違反規(guī)定的人甚至不會(huì)給團(tuán)購(gòu)觀眾發(fā)放電影票,在整場(chǎng)放映中基本不上報(bào)一分錢的收入。只有團(tuán)購(gòu)代表會(huì)與電影院直接打交道,所以如果他沒(méi)有提出特殊要求,為每一位成員打印電影票,在電影院上報(bào)給發(fā)行方的收入報(bào)告中,是不會(huì)顯示團(tuán)購(gòu)情況的。
在會(huì)費(fèi)方面也會(huì)耍手腕,因?yàn)闀?huì)費(fèi)是提前收取的。會(huì)員的電影票上只顯示在幾號(hào)放映廳,放映方可以將電影票任意對(duì)應(yīng)到別的影片上,或者根本不記錄會(huì)員看過(guò)電影,這樣他們就可以私吞所有的收入。
一些影院投資了單獨(dú)的零售電腦系統(tǒng),可以讓購(gòu)票者買到正確的電影票,同時(shí)不會(huì)讓中央系統(tǒng)中顯示任何數(shù)據(jù)。而另外一組可信的購(gòu)買數(shù)據(jù)會(huì)被輸入正確的系統(tǒng)中,但顯示的上座率較低。
我了解到的發(fā)行商和放映方都認(rèn)為如今的欺騙行為較從前,就是十幾年前,收斂了很多;現(xiàn)在只有三、四線城市會(huì)出現(xiàn)這樣的行為。中國(guó)最大的電影制作和發(fā)行公司中國(guó)電影集團(tuán)同數(shù)家大型私人公司共同組建并領(lǐng)導(dǎo)了一個(gè)協(xié)會(huì),雇傭1000人監(jiān)督全國(guó)的影院。另一家國(guó)有電影公司華夏電影公司也擁有一支八百人的隊(duì)伍。
但是,即使是這些精明的監(jiān)督者也有力所不及的情況。例如,影院出售一張80元的電影票(熱映電影的正常票價(jià)),同時(shí)贈(zèng)送免費(fèi)的爆米花。這時(shí)候,爆米花可能占去票價(jià)中的60元,而電影票只能占票價(jià)中的20元。電影院聲稱,雙方商議的影片最低價(jià)格就是20元,因此影院沒(méi)有違反任何規(guī)定。
《變形金剛3》同票房潛力很小的小制作電影《楊善洲》捆綁,讓后者取得了令人震驚的票房收入(7900萬(wàn)元),但是這一數(shù)字同極少量的觀影人數(shù)并不相符。這是一種類似的手段。雖然消費(fèi)者不會(huì)為這樣的捆綁交易多付錢,但網(wǎng)上還是有一些對(duì)這類行為的投訴。
作為監(jiān)管機(jī)構(gòu),國(guó)家新聞出版廣電總局一月底公布了治理虛報(bào)、謊報(bào)票房收入的辦法。成立專門(mén)基金,補(bǔ)貼銷售點(diǎn)電腦軟件的升級(jí)。國(guó)家電影專資辦主任姜濤表示,安裝于2005年的現(xiàn)行系統(tǒng)“跟不上新情況”。
“新系統(tǒng)會(huì)修補(bǔ)漏洞,銷售結(jié)束十分鐘以后即結(jié)束上報(bào)窗口,而不再等到第二天中午”,延緩上報(bào)時(shí)間,會(huì)為弄虛作假留下空間。五月即將建成國(guó)家級(jí)平臺(tái),影院方面將于十月完成升級(jí)。
除了對(duì)所有銷售系統(tǒng)進(jìn)行管理,國(guó)家新聞出版廣電總局堅(jiān)持要求所有電影票顯示正確的價(jià)格和入場(chǎng)費(fèi)。但沒(méi)有對(duì)違反規(guī)定的具體處罰措施。發(fā)行方和放映方承認(rèn),軟件更新一定會(huì)提供很大幫助,但幫助可能不夠。
“違反規(guī)定的代價(jià)還是太低了。如果被發(fā)現(xiàn)虛報(bào)了10次票價(jià),只需要補(bǔ)上缺口即可,”樂(lè)視影業(yè)市場(chǎng)副總裁黃紫燕說(shuō)。
華星ume影城的經(jīng)理曹勇建議吊銷違反規(guī)定的單位的營(yíng)業(yè)執(zhí)照。“電影院的投資上千萬(wàn),這樣嚴(yán)厲的懲罰,會(huì)讓他們覺(jué)得為了8萬(wàn)、10萬(wàn)的票房受這樣的懲罰劃不來(lái)。”
還有人想到其他辦法,如運(yùn)用可以自動(dòng)掃描影院放映廳上座率的紅外攝像機(jī)。未來(lái)8到9年,將可以利用這項(xiàng)技術(shù),據(jù)稱這項(xiàng)技術(shù)的準(zhǔn)確率為95%。但現(xiàn)在這項(xiàng)技術(shù)尚未得到使用。
電影制作方在受到損失時(shí),不愿意太過(guò)嚴(yán)厲,因?yàn)樗麄儾幌氲米锓庞撤?,原因在于在商業(yè)鏈上放映方所處的環(huán)節(jié)直接接觸終端用戶。一些人說(shuō)不再為這樣的不規(guī)矩行為感到難過(guò),而是開(kāi)始失望。
這一次真的要采取行動(dòng),“我們要肅清行業(yè)中的這類非法,違規(guī)行為”,國(guó)家新聞出版廣電總局電影局局長(zhǎng)張宏森說(shuō)。
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