In the wake of the film’s release, cinemagoers have been sharing footage of crowds watching the film, with certain moments prompting loud, vocal responses from the people in attendance.

One moment, which features prominently in the film’s trailer, sees Black and Momoa confronted in a boxing ring by a cuboid Minecraft chicken, who is ridden around the ring by another character. “Chicken jockey,” exclaims Black’s character, a reference to the video game that seems to be sending audiences wild.

Several videos captured by cinemagoers show audiences chanting the line along with Black, before whooping and clapping loudly. On social media, many people attested that they had witnessed, or participated in, similar outbursts.

“My theater clapped every time Jack Black name dropped a Minecraft item that was in the trailers, and when he said Chicken Jockey I s*** you not the entire row in front of me gave a standing ovation,” one person shared.

“Just got back from watching the movie myself, can confirm everyone in the theater collectively yelled ‘CHICKEN JOCKEY’ during that moment and it was glorious ngl,” wrote another.

“This is what made me love my experience more, bc even though the movie wasn’t as bad as i thought it was going to be, the packed cinema with everyone shouting, clapping and cheering whenever jack black name dropped something genuinely gave me so much joy,” commented someone else.

However, the phenomenon has drawn staunch criticism from others, with some claiming that audience participation had “ruined” the theatrical experience for them.

  • @[email protected]
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    1299 days ago

    This is dumb to me, but I’m not the target audience for this movie. It sounds like the people who are the target audience are having a blast and that’s awesome.

    • @[email protected]
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      279 days ago

      Same. Never been into Minecraft, and hate when people are noisy and whatnot in a theater when I’m watching a movie. That being said, if they’re having fun, more power to them. Not gonna yuck their yum.

      • @[email protected]
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        129 days ago

        The term is “read the room”, I think. Rarely, some movies are just like that. Classic showings of Rocky Horror aren’t exactly done for serious movie gowers as a prime example. While I am not attempting to put RHPS and a Minecraft movie in the same class, I would go to a Minecraft movie with the same mindset.

        • Cethin
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          48 days ago

          They aren’t in the same class, but I does seem like they’d both be in the same category. They’re weird goofy movies that shouldn’t be taken too seriously. I could imagine having fun at the MC movie if you’re allowed to goof off. I couldn’t see myself having fun with it if I need to sit quietly and watch it for it’s “art.”

    • @[email protected]
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      179 days ago

      Saw this happen the whole movie last night. Not my favorite flick but my daughter loved it and everyone in there seemed to be having an absolute blast so 🤷‍♂️

      • @[email protected]
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        18 days ago

        Minecraft has only been around for 15 years, so I would think the generation that never knew a time without Minecraft would be about that old, as well.

      • @[email protected]
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        38 days ago

        Not at all. New young kids are joining every day. 7 year olds playing it are common (sadly).

  • @[email protected]
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    229 days ago

    Several videos captured by cinemagoers show audiences chanting the line along with Black, before whooping and clapping loudly. On social media, many people attested that they had witnessed, or participated in, similar outbursts.

    “My theater clapped every time Jack Black name dropped a Minecraft item that was in the trailers, and when he said Chicken Jockey I s* you not the entire row in front of me gave a standing ovation,”** one person shared.

    “Just got back from watching the movie myself, can confirm everyone in the theater collectively yelled ‘CHICKEN JOCKEY’ during that moment and it was glorious ngl,” wrote another.

    “This is what made me love my experience more, bc even though the movie wasn’t as bad as i thought it was going to be, the packed cinema with everyone shouting, clapping and cheering whenever jack black name dropped something genuinely gave me so much joy,” commented someone else.

    This sounds like a Red Letter Media skit lol

  • Endymion_Mallorn
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    119 days ago

    I think if you’re going to a movie about a popular video game, you should expect that people will respond positively to references to the popular video game. For myself, I wouldn’t have a clue, because I’ve only ever used Minetest/Luanti.

  • Captain Aggravated
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    99 days ago

    I’m reminded of a British comedy show called My Hero. (If you want to find it, you’re better off googling “Thermoman”) It is a show about an alien who comes to Earth and is basically a superhero with heat-based powers, but is also a bit of a doof. The show is actually kind of a rom-com as it focuses on his alter ego coming to terms with living among humans.

    At one point, his girlfriends’ parents are in a community theater production, and George (Thermoman’s mild mannered alter ego) acts very inappropriately, trying to interact with the play etc. Because he had only been introduced to Christmas Pantomime* and wasn’t aware there were different kinds of theater.

    Getting mad at shit is like, my whole comedy persona or whatever, but I struggle to get mad at this. Maybe we should name it as a genre or something the way the British did with “Pantomime” versus other productions you’re supposed to take more seriously. Even more “normal” comedies where you’re allowed to laugh at jokes but are otherwise not supposed to try to contribute.

    So…let’s do it. Let’s make audience participation cinema. I’ve read about a Taylor Swift movie where tween girls were singing along and dancing in the aisles. If the kids are enjoying it, who goddamn cares?

    *This isn’t really a thing in America, not sure about the rest of the English speaking world. It’s a theater performance often done around Christmastime that has some comedy, some slapstick, some bawdy jokes, some audience participation, and the general idea seems to be “let’s not take it so seriously and just have some fun” kind of theater.

  • @[email protected]
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    218 days ago

    The people complaining about that movie would have heart attacks and die at a screening of Rocky Horror.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 days ago

      For stage shows that have some audience participation as an element, sure. For most other cases, it just seems like people who don’t know how to behave themselves in public. Like, sure, go for it if you’re at a Rocky Horror Picture Show screening, or the theater advertised it as a sing along screening, but otherwise, it’s inappropriate and inconsiderate.

      • @[email protected]
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        7 days ago

        How did TRHPS experience become what we know it as today?

        Imagine hearing about TRHPS in 1976 or 1977 and going to see it and experiencing it especially without knowing fully what you were walking into?

        What is different about the emergence of participatory memes for Minecraft vs. the established memes for TRHPS? The quickness of the behavior? The documentation of it? The fact that it’s new for us now and not something we inherited?

        Quite Frankenfurtively, I’d rather be in the theater with a bunch of people enjoying it as opposed to people sitting there rigidly watching what amounts to be a very silly movie.

        And besides, if people are so upset, ask for a refund or comp ticket and leave the theater. The same raucous behavior happened every Friday night when a horror film was screening back in my day.

        • @[email protected]
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          27 days ago

          Eh, if I knew it was permitted going in, that’s on me. If it’s a new movie and there’s no notice that they’ll allow that behavior, and they allow some guests to be loud and obnoxious for the whole showing, I wouldn’t go back to that theater unless I heard things changed. That was more than enough to avoid teenagers being insufferable at Friday night horror films when I was growing up. Some of them allowed it, and they had ongoing problems with teenagers being little monsters (breaking stuff, causing fights, bothering other patrons outside the theaters, etc), and gained reputations for being dumps not worth going to. Others required teenagers to be accompanied by parents, to control them a bit and shame them into behaving. Others just didn’t indulge in it at all, and would just straight up kick out disruptive people.

          I’d prefer more places had a system like Alamo Drafthouse’s, where they post on the site when it’s going to be a screening with audience participation, or a children’s screening, or whatever. Everyone is free to choose the sort of screening they want to attend, and those who opt for a quiet theater experience without some muppet feeling the need to scream “Oh no! He’s gonna get you bitch, run!” or similarly obvious outbursts, don’t have to put up with it.

          Honestly, 9/10, I find the people shouting and carrying on really only add something to the experience for the friends that went with them and find them funny. Save that for when you’re watching at home with them, or when there’s a screening that explicitly allows it.

  • @[email protected]
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    219 days ago

    Saw it last night, can confirm audience went wild with chicken jockey and flint and steel. Honestly didn’t think it was too bad, but I think part of the trend is also to fling fucking popcorn all over the place because when we went in the theater was spotless, and when the lights came back on, it was like a fucking popcorn bomb went off in there, the worst I’ve ever seen in my life; honestly felt bad for the employees.

    • Robust Mirror
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      38 days ago

      Yeah I’ve been to my cinema a ton and every movie I’ve ever been to they leave the lights dimmed until the credits finish (basically lights off during movie, dimmed during credits, fully on after). They’ll also wait until everyone has left until they start cleaning.

      This one they immediately turned the lights on fully (even before the first after credits scene that is almost instantly) and came in to start cleaning up, because it was so much worse than normal they needed that extra time.

  • @[email protected]
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    409 days ago

    I think at this point they could make the “Hawk Tuah Skibidi Movie” and people would clap and throw popcorn in the air every time they say a brain rot catchphrase from tiktok.

    And honestly I’m ok with that, the only people there know what they are signing up for.

    • ᴇᴍᴘᴇʀᴏʀ 帝OPM
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      139 days ago

      I’m fine with people getting rowdy (I went to a late screening of Spider-Man: No Way Home that was pretty raucous and it added to the fun) but I draw the line at throwing water and popcorn around as the cinema staff have to clean up that mess.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 days ago

        In a way it’s obviously shitty behaviour, and I feel for the people who have to clean it, on the other hand if the cleaning becomes too much and recurring they will have to hire a dedicated cleaning crew, and that creates jobs

          • Robust Mirror
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            28 days ago

            Then a year later they’ll fire those extra people and add the cleaning duties to the regular staff while not paying them more or reducing the ticket prices.

        • @[email protected]
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          68 days ago

          That’s why I break windows. Six more francs in the hand of the glazier. It is a good thing to break windows, it causes money to circulate, and the encouragement of industry in general will be the result of it.

        • @[email protected]
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          68 days ago

          It never fails to baffle me how media has managed to gaslight Americans into thinking that creating pointless busywork jobs for their own sake is some sort of moral imperative.

  • @[email protected]
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    9 days ago

    Oh thank god. I saw it the first night in theaters and it was just a damn riot. Like I get why people complain about the behavior. But the movie really goes well along with it.

    I was in tears from laughter by the end of the movie. I don’t know what was intended and what wasn’t, but I definitely had more fun than my kid.

    • @[email protected]
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      59 days ago

      Really? I don’t get it. I chuckled a couple times at Momoa, but otherwise it felt like listening to a kid describe the game for 2 hrs. Like “HEY HEY HEY! We got Jack black to do his shtick to hide the fact that we didn’t use any writers!”

    • fox [comrade/them]
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      89 days ago

      Go to an indie theater screening of The Room or Rocky Horror. People interacting with the movie has been a thing for decades. People were shit-talking to the characters on stage during Shakespeare’s plays during his lifetime.

      • @[email protected]
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        29 days ago

        Right. Comparing this to screenings of niche/cult movies in private like settings and plebeian behaviour from over 400 years ago… Ok then.

  • @[email protected]
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    119 days ago

    In fairness this is the only way to enjoy the film. Other than media literacy YouTubers that’ll praise it in a few years, I think this is the best it’ll get in a while.

  • @[email protected]
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    279 days ago

    The crowd and reactions are one of the biggest parts of the theater experience that’s actually positive.

    • @[email protected]
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      119 days ago

      I imagine it varies between countries. In the UK I would say I’m happy for laughter, and the odd gasp. Anything more such as cheering, singing or clapping is not on to me personally.

    • @[email protected]
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      38 days ago

      The crowd and reactions are the exact reasons I usually stay in to watch films. Severe anxiety, and all that. I love the theater experience minus that, tho.

      I hate the trend of films leaving theaters so quickly now because I used to wait several weeks to catch a film past it’s peak and be one of like 3 people in there and it was bliss. Get the best seat, get to enjoy the film without children crying or people on their phones, or the constant shuffling of jackets. Hyper vigilance is a curse.

      But… Catching the 10yr anniversary of Interstellar was the second time I’d been at a packed theater where no one spoke and it was amazing. But it was slightly ruined by the guy next to me stinking of beer and cigarettes.

      And catching the R-rated release of the animated Killing Joke was the first time. The film with the original voice actors? It was phenomenal despite the packed theater but it was slightly ruined by the guy next to me constantly using his napkin after every bite and every sip of drink. He’d wipe his face, then his hands, then his cup and toss it somewhere. Rinse and repeat for an hour and a half, every few moments. Drove me nuts. The ending being true to the comic was pretty funny to see the crowd, and specifically him, be so disappointed, plus the quick rushes out the theater for parents to take their kids was satisfying too when they realized R-rating meant R-rating.

      Catching mystery films at regal or cheap films at AMC are about all I can do because the experience is cheap enough to outweigh my anxiety, but even that’s been a while with money being tight.

      • @[email protected]
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        58 days ago

        To me the theater is now a place for collective enjoyment. The home viewing experience is good enough if I want to watch something in silence, not that I have even a modest set up. The theater is now about having that energy and cheering because it’s all that’s really left.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 days ago

          That’s valid, for sure! I just can’t do it no mo’.

          I just get so anxious and nervous in theaters packed with people. Like, it’s against the rules to make noise or exist. So when people “break the rules” I keep expecting everyone to get into a big fight or screaming match about it and I can’t focus on the film without focusing on the people, waiting for the shoe to drop. That and anxiety about breathing the air of sick people?? That’s only since '20, though.

          The B.O. booze/cigs guy was rough. But the napkin dude was driving me nuts because it was the final showing of a two day limited theatrical release that wasn’t chrap. Drove me nuts to spend so much to listen to that dudes napkin wipes lol.

          I wish I were built different, but I try every so often to go. I usually stay in with my headphones to get a similar sound feeling.