FINAL EXAM
EXTENSIVE READING
“ESSAY”

By:
Erlinda Novi Andriyanti
11.1.01.08.0069
3-A
FACULTY of TEACHER
TRAINING and EDUCATION
ENGLISH DEPARTEMENT
UNIVERSITY of NUSANTARA
PGRI KEDIRI
2013/2014
The Hazards of Moviegoing
By John Langan
I am a movie fanatic. When friends
want to know what picture won the Oscar in 1980 or who played the police chief
in Jaws, they ask me. My friends, though, have stopped asking me if I want to
go out to the movies. The problems in getting to the theater, the theater itself,
and the behavior of some patrons are all reasons why I often wait for a movie
to show up on TV.
First of all, just getting to the
theater presents difficulties. Leaving a home equipped with a TV and a video
recorder isn't an attractive idea on a humid, cold, or rainy night. Even if the
weather cooperates, there is still a thirty-minute drive to the theater down a
congested highway, followed by the hassle of looking for a parking space. And
then there are the lines. After hooking yourself to the end of a human chain,
you worry about whether there will be enough tickets, whether you will get
seats together, and whether many people will sneak into the line ahead of you.
Once you have made it to the box
office and gotten your tickets, you are confronted with the problems of the
theater itself. If you are in one of the run-down older theaters, you must
adjust to the musty smell of seldom-cleaned carpets. Escaped springs lurk in
the faded plush or cracked leather seats, and half the seats you sit in seem loose
or tilted so that you sit at a strange angle. The newer twin and quad theaters
offer their own problems. Sitting in an area only one-quarter the size of a
regular theater, moviegoers often have to put up with the sound of the movie
next door. This is especially jarring when the other movie involves racing cars
or a karate war and you are trying to enjoy a quiet love story. And whether the
theater is old or new, it will have floors that seem to be coated with rubber
cement. By the end of a movie, shoes almost have to be pried off the floor
because they have become sealed to a deadly compound of spilled soda, hardening
bubble gum, and crushed Ju-Jubes.
Some of the patrons are even more of a
problem than the theater itself. Little kids race up and down the aisles,
usually in giggling packs. Teenagers try to impress their friends by talking
back to the screen, whistling, and making what they consider to be hilarious
noises. Adults act as if they were at home in their own living rooms and
comment loudly on the ages of the stars or why movies aren't as good anymore.
And people of all ages crinkle candy wrappers, stick gum on their seats, and
drop popcorn tubs or cups of crushed ice and soda on the floor. They also cough
and burp, squirm endlessly in their seats, file out for repeated trips to the
rest rooms or concession stand, and elbow you out of the armrest on either side
of your seat.
After arriving home from the movies
one night, I decided that I was not going to be a moviegoer anymore. I was
tired of the problems involved in getting to the movies and dealing with the
theater itself and some of the patrons. The next day I arranged to have cable
TV service installed in my home. I may now see movies a bit later than other
people, but I'll be more relaxed watching box office hits in the comfort of my
own living room.
Summary of
Essay
The
Oscar in 1980 or who played the police chief in Jaws, they ask me. The
problems in getting to the theater, the theater itself, and the behavior of
some patrons are all reasons why I often wait for a movie to show up on TV. There
is still a thirty-minute drive to the theater down a congested highway,
followed by the hassle of looking for a parking space. You will get seats
together, and whether many people will sneak into the line ahead of you.
The other movie involves racing cars
or a karate war and you are trying to enjoy a quiet love story. The end of a
movie, shoes almost have to be pried off the floor because they have become
sealed to a deadly compound of spilled soda, hardening bubble gum, and crushed
Ju-Jubes. The patrons are even more of a problem than the theater itself. people
of all ages crinkle candy wrappers, stick gum on their seats, and drop popcorn
tubs or cups of crushed ice and soda on the floor. I decided that I was not
going to be a moviegoer anymore.
Essay Response Form
a)
Essay title : The Hazards of Moviegoing
b) Author : John
Langan
c)
Number
of pages : 2 pages
d) Subject : The Hazards a movie
fanatic
e) Thesis : I like
watching movies but I prefer watching them at home.
f) Supporting paragraph :
·
First Paragraph : To
know what picture won the Oscar in 1980 or who played the police chief in Jaws.
·
Second Paragraph : Just getting to the theater presents
difficulties.
·
Third Paragraph : Facing the problems of the theater
itself.
·
Fourth Paragraph : Some of the patrons are annoying.
·
Fifth Paragraph : I was tired of the problems
involved in getting to the movies and dealing with the theater itself and some
of the patrons.
g) Ending
Paragraph : I prefer to watch movies
at home where it is comfortable, clean and safe.
h) Tone
of Essay : Happy and objective
i)
Author’s purpose : To show the problems in getting to the
theater
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar