IELTS Speaking for Success - 🎥 Cinema (S06E28) + Transcript
Episode Date: January 17, 2022Do you like going to the cinema? Did you usually go to the cinema when you were a child? When was the last time you went to the cinema? What kinds of films do you prefer? Tune in and have a great day...! - Get exclusive episodes on IELTS Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: https://bit.ly/transcripts06e28 Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2022 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
At Desjardin, we speak business.
We speak equipment modernization.
We're fluent in data digitization and expansion into foreign markets.
And we can talk all day about streamlining manufacturing processes.
Because at Desjardin business, we speak the same language you do.
Business.
So join the more than 400,000 Canadian entrepreneurs who already count on us.
And contact Desjardin today.
We'd love to talk, business.
Hello gorgeous, I'm Maria.
And my name is Rory.
We are the host of the IL Speaking for Success podcast,
the podcast that aims to help you improve your speaking skills,
as well as your listening skills along the way in 2022.
Woo, youppy!
We've started this podcast.
Oh gosh, why did we start this podcast?
Why?
To bring joy and gorgeous vocabulary and super-duper grammar
into your English life.
your IOTS score.
For you to have Rory score.
A Rory score, it means band nine score.
Rory, have you seen the new Spider-Man movie?
No, actually.
I've not been to the cinema in ages.
Hmm.
Interesting cinema.
Yes, this episode is going to be about cinema and movies.
It's another coincidence.
We're here, well, almost three years after we started,
and we're still having coincidence.
We don't plan it, dear listen, okay?
Oh no.
Every time.
We have our premium episodes, and this week we're going to describe a course that impressed
Rory.
We're doing the freshest IOT's topics.
As you know, they've added new ones recently.
So Rory is going to describe a course that impressed him.
And in part three, we're going to talk about remembering things.
you can get our premium on Patreon, Apple Podcasts, Spotify or Telegram.
And it's important to point out that you don't just get things to listen to.
There are things to read, specifically the transcript.
So if you are not comfortable just listening to the sound of my voice and Maria's voice
and repeating what we say, then you can download the transcript and you can use that to help you
understand exactly what we're talking about and to practice by yourself as well. And if you're a
teacher, you could use them for your teaching materials. Yes, click the link on the description and take
look at the transcript, transcript, transcript, transcript, transcript. So let's get cracking with the
cinema. So while we might have talked about films and movies before, we've not talked about the
cinema and we haven't talked about these questions before. So even if the topic is similar,
or the questions are new.
Rory, do you like going to the cinema?
I used to like it a lot.
Though these days it's just more convenient for me to stream things online.
You have to wait a bit for the latest blockbusters to come out, though.
So it's a bit of a wait, but it's not exactly the worst thing in the world.
Although you miss out on the popcorn, but at the same time, you don't have to wait in line
for the tickets, for example.
How often do you go to the cinema?
Well, like I implied before, hardly ever these days, there's just too much to be getting on with.
So spending time sitting in front of a giant screen isn't the best use of time, or at least I think so.
If I had more time than I would.
When was the last time you went to the cinema?
I can remember it vividly, actually.
I took my other half to see Godzilla versus Kong at this huge mall where we used to live.
The whole plot was ridiculous and the characters were incommelier.
consequential. But I did like the experience of eating popcorn and laughing at how silly everything
was. And thankfully, the rows of seats were mostly empty, so it was okay to laugh out loud. Usually in
the cinema, there's this sort of a convention or unspoken rule that you don't make too much
noise, but we could, which was good. Did you usually go to the cinema when you were a child?
Oh, I definitely used to go far more often when I was younger. There wasn't much of a choice,
frankly, since my parents did all of the decision-making in that regard.
Based on what I can remember of it, though, I did enjoy myself.
We used to watch the Disney classics, for example.
So, yeah, we went and we went fairly often.
Do you like to watch films alone or with your friends?
I think it depends on the movie, really.
Well, I like watching my favorite movie, which is contact, by myself,
because it's a film that's designed to provoke deep thinking,
which I think is best done alone.
other hand, there are some films which are just mindless fun, like Starship Troopers, which
you should definitely watch with friends just to enjoy the insanity of the storyline and the
setting. However, if we think about the cinema, then that's something, that's almost always
a collective experience, isn't it? You don't really go to the cinema by yourself.
What kinds of films do you prefer? I think that depends entirely on how I'm feeling, as it is
for other people. If I feel nostalgic, then I'll watch an older film, even if I've seen it millions of
times before, like, well, we talked about Disney classics, for example. Or if I'm feeling like
something new, then I'll see what my friends are recommending. Most recently, I developed a taste
for found footage films and mockumentaries, which are either quite mysterious or humorous,
and that's quite good because they're, well, you get engrossed in the plot, and you can lose
yourself that way. Thank you, Rory. You are like a film star. You're the star. You're the
star of our podcast.
A star of vocabulary and grammar.
Unless it's conditionals,
my New Year's resolution was not to learn more about
conditionals. No.
Did you switch to articles?
I know exactly what I'm talking about with articles.
It's just conditionals that I hate.
So cinema, I can say go to the cinema
or go to the movies.
Yes.
Do British people use the word movies
because it tends to be American?
Movies.
Well, it used to.
to be, or it was, that Americans said movies and British people said films.
But now it's mixed. You can hear one or the other.
And who cares? No, no one cares, you know, British American.
Yeah. So go to the cinema, go to the movies, watch a film, watch a movie.
And then the question is, do you like going to the cinema? And you say, I used to like it.
So our favorite, used to. Yeah. And then you can go
with the latest blockbusters.
So, first of all, what's a blockbuster?
A blockbuster is just another way of saying, like, a major film or a new release.
And there are different kinds of blockbusters.
There are blockbusters in general, or there are summer blockbusters,
which are very expensive films that come out in the summer.
I don't know what the summer blockbuster was last year.
I think really surviving 2020, when was the blockbuster?
Hold on.
2020.
And we use the word the latest.
Can you say the last blockbuster?
Yes, but it's better.
Yes, you can.
You could say the last blockbuster film.
The last blockbuster film I saw.
But if we're talking about in general, then it's the latest.
Ah, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay.
The freshest.
And on the subject of the latest blockbuster films,
apparently that was the Eternals, like Marvel Eternals.
Which I didn't watch because it looked absolutely horrendous.
Did you watch it?
I think so.
Yeah.
The last Marvel movie I watched was Black Widow, which was funny because it was just so stupid.
Oh, I watched The Venom.
I watched The New One.
Yes.
How was it?
Did you like it?
Oh, yeah, I like Venom.
He's funny.
Yeah, hilarious.
Yeah, so the latest film or it's like the newest film.
so the latest blockbusters.
And films come out.
They are released or they come out.
Yes.
Rory, because you don't go to the cinema these days, you said, I miss out on popcorn.
Well, I miss out on standing in line for popcorn.
You can probably make your own popcorn at home.
But I don't because it's not very healthy.
Yeah, it's not fun.
You go to the cinema, you just take some popcorn.
and there are all kinds of popcorn, sweet popcorn, purple, green, salty, sweet and salty, it's crazy.
Then, how often do you go to the cinema?
You said, hardly ever these days.
So hardly ever is like rarely.
Yeah.
You don't say seldom.
Don't say seldom.
Please don't say seldom.
Oh, how often do you go to the cinema?
Quite seldom.
How do you do?
Seldom.
How do you do?
Well, okay, we're making fun of it
I mean, like, you could say that,
but it's not exactly something that you hear very often.
And the idea behind studying for English exams
is that they prepare you for real life.
Yeah, so hardly ever, rarely, like once a week, once a month.
Yeah, something like that.
At the cinema, you sit in front of a giant screen.
Yes.
So a screen is like, well,
There's different ways of talking about screens.
It's like a giant television.
Yeah.
So you can say like, oh, I really enjoy sitting in front of a giant screen with my popcorn,
munching on some crisps, making loud noises, and making all people annoyed.
Oh, you know, like the trend is now that you take McDonald's to the cinema,
and then everything smells of your McDonald's.
Who takes McDonald's to the cinema?
Russian people, that's who.
Yeah, especially if there's a McDonald's next to the cinema
or inside the same building.
You just have to take McDonald's inside.
So everything like wreaks of McDonald's.
Mmm, yum, yum, yum.
Yeah.
This is you.
Oh, yeah.
No, because if I don't take McDonald's, no, listen,
if I don't take McDonald's, other people will.
And I'm going to end up smelling their McDonald's.
instead of doing that, I take my McDonald's and I smell my McDonald's
instead of other people's McDonald's. Does it make sense?
Watch the movie.
So, we need topic-specific vocabulary.
And when we talk about films, it's the plot.
The plot and characters.
So the characters are the people in the story.
The plot is the story.
Yeah.
You can say the plot was ridiculous.
It's like stupid.
Or the plot was interesting, exciting.
Engroasing.
engrossing, oh yeah, it's like really exciting.
That's another way of saying it's very interesting.
It's so interesting that I cannot think about other things.
You said that the characters in Godzilla versus Kong movie were inconsequential.
Well, yeah, they didn't make, well, okay, they did make a difference,
but really, the whole film is about two monsters trying to kill each other.
It's not about human drama.
Godzilla versus Kong, wow.
How long ago was it?
Were you like 10?
20.
It was 20.
It was when I saw it.
I don't know when it came out.
Oh.
Okay.
So you went to the cinema to see an old movie.
Oh.
No, Godzilla versus Kong was like, was something in 2021, wasn't it?
Really?
Really?
The new one.
Okay.
The new one.
Oh, wow.
Okay.
Maybe it had a different name.
Anyway, who cares?
You don't have to be factually correct in a else you could just make something up.
And then Rory watches films which are designed to provoke deep thinking.
Yes.
Provoke is just saying it pokes you in the direction of something.
And he watches such films alone.
Yes.
Or you watch something alone, watch something by myself.
And then mindless films or mindless fun.
Yes.
Films which are just mindless fun.
So if something is mindless, it's like,
They haven't put a lot of thought into it.
Starship troopers is a really bad example, though,
because a lot of thought was put into that.
But, you know, you compare a film like Contact,
which is about the human experience,
to Starship Troopers,
which is about murdering monsters and vice versa.
It's not as deep, in my opinion.
Is Spider-Man films mindless fun?
Well, compared to Contact, yeah.
But it doesn't mean it's a bad movie.
It just means they have different purposes.
Yeah, so you can say, like, I usually watch films which are designed to provoke deep thinking alone,
but something like films which are just mindless fun, I prefer to watch them with my friends.
And then going to the cinema is a collective experience, collective.
So it's something that you do with other people and you have with other people.
So even if you go to the cinema alone, there's almost always another person there.
Yeah, true.
At least one, I hope.
Oh, have you ever had such situations when, okay, you go to the cinema alone or with somebody
and then there is silence and then somebody goes like, they start laughing at something
which is not funny or something ridiculously stupid and then everybody starts laughing because
of this person.
No, it's always, it's even more annoying than that because that is at least fun.
but in Russia, it's people on their phones distracting others.
Yeah, yeah.
If you are a Russian person, please complain to your government and get them to ban this.
Because why do you have your phone on in a movie?
In a movie theater.
Why?
Yeah.
Because you are commenting on the film to your phone talking to your friends.
It should be banned.
Life.
Yeah, yeah.
It could be really annoying.
This is a clash of cultures that we're having here where I am right.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, and you can say that it drives me up the wall.
It does drive me up the wall.
When people start talking and using their smartphones at the cinema, it drives me up the wall.
Maybe just in general, it drives me up the wall when people speak.
Could you comment on footage films?
What are they?
Found footage films.
It's a collocation.
Found footage.
footage. Yeah. Now, that's the genre of the film, so the kind of film. But specifically, if you think
about movies like The Blair Witch Project, it's people, the actors are pretending they're normal
people with normal cameras, filming something normal, and then all of a sudden something crazy
happens. So it's usually they're horror films. So the Blair Witch Project is a found footage
film and it's a horror film.
There's another, there are two films.
One's American and one's Spanish. I think the
original one is called Wreck.
And that's the Spanish version.
And the American one is called
Quarantine. And
there are movie crews
filming normal
experiences and then all of a sudden there's a zombie
outbreak. Oh, wow, zombies.
But there's lots of different kinds.
And really, most of them
are really well done. I really like them.
But some people think that
oh, it's all, they all look the same, and they have the same plot.
Like, there's always, they're doing something normal and then something interesting happens.
But what they have described there is the structure of a film.
Like, in every movie, they're doing something normal and then something interesting happens.
Like, that's the idea.
So I don't see why people have a problem with it.
Mm-hmm.
I've seen the Blair Witch Project.
Did you like it?
Well, it's interesting.
Interesting.
That's another way of saying.
No.
No, it's not a film that I'm going to rewatch, but it's interesting, it's different.
So, yeah, why not?
You can say that I feel nostalgic when I watch an older film.
Yes.
A Disney classic.
Nostalgia is difficult to explain.
But basically, it's like when you miss things from the past, and so you watch things to relive
this experience of the past.
So some people are nostalgic for Disney films because it reminds them of their childhood.
True, yeah.
Make sure you use the present perfect talking about films that you have seen.
So I've seen it a million times or I've seen it twice.
And then you can use this structure.
If I'm feeling like something new, so if I'm feeling like something new,
I go to the cinema and watch the latest blog bust.
stuff with my friends.
In addition to found footage films,
which are like made up real-life
experiences, then
you can have mockumentaries. Now, a
mockumentary is like a documentary,
but it's usually funny
or it's about something
fake.
So, for example,
there's lots of different mockumentaries.
There's some about the Loch Ness monster.
The ones that don't treat it
as if it's
like they treat it like it's a real thing
and the actors are pretending to be real people.
So a documentary has real doctors, real scientists.
A mockumentary has actors pretending to be scientists
investigating some kind of experience.
So...
Oh, wow.
One example of found footage and a mockumentary crossed together
is a film called The Bay.
Have you seen this film?
No, I don't think so.
It's a horror film.
It's quite...
Well, I think it's fun because it's got...
science and found footage features mixed together in a mockumentary about this disaster, this fictional
disaster.
Oh, wow.
Borat, Borat.
Yeah, Borat's a mockumentary.
So, if you want to find out more about these kinds of films, I definitely recommend them.
But if not, at least make sure that you know about the different kinds, your favorite kinds.
Yeah, we have an episode about films, and we discuss different kinds, so we're not going to repeat
all the stuff. So after listening to this episode, go find our episode on films and have a listen to this.
Okay. Please do. And I think last year, like 2021, it's already last year, we had Friends reunion and we had Harry Potter reunion. So two reunions. Have you watched them?
No.
Do you listen, have you watched them?
I don't really, I'm not, okay, I'm going to send like a monster. I'm not a, I'm not a
fan of Harry Potter or Friends.
That doesn't mean I hate them.
I just
don't see
what's so great about them.
Okay. It's okay.
It's okay. Well, yeah.
But it's interesting. That's
like Harry Potter reunion, also. Friends are reunion,
so everything is reunion.
Watch Savage Land. Sorry. I just
realized that's another one of my favorite mockumentaries.
Anyway, now we're done.
Savage Land.
Also a horror film.
I love, I love.
Like that.
Anyway, let's comment briefly on or summarize everything that's been in here.
So, if we want to talk about the kinds of films, we can talk about blockbusters, found
footage, or mockumentaries.
If we want to talk about parts of films, the plot, the characters.
We can describe the plot as ridiculous and the characters as inconsequential.
And then, if we want to talk about things you have in a cinema, you have popcorn,
a giant screen, and a collective experience.
And if we talk about graphics,
Then we could say, if I feel nostalgic or if I'm feeling like something new,
and we need to remember perfect tenses, if I've seen it before, or I've seen it a million times.
Anyway, now dear listener, let's listen to Rory's answers one more time.
Why?
It's useful to listen to it again after we have discussed the words.
So you just listen to it and you notice the words.
remember the words better, you notice the grammar structures, also you can repeat right after
Rory, okay? And do it with your transcript too. Don't forget the transcript. They're on our website.
Have lovely films in your life. Bye. Bye. It's Canadian Tire's Black Friday sale. With the lowest
prices of the year. Hello, can we go? Limbo again. Shop the Black Friday sale at Canadian Tire
and save up to 60%. November 27th to December 7th.
Conditions apply. Details online.
Rory, do you like going to the cinema?
I used to like it a lot.
Though these days it's just more convenient for me to stream things online.
You have to wait a bit for the latest blockbusters to come out, though.
So it's a bit of a wait, but it's not exactly the worst thing in the world.
Although you miss out on the popcorn, but at the same time,
you don't have to wait in line for the tickets, for example.
How often do you go to the cinema?
Well, like I implied before, hardly ever these days, there's just too much to be getting on with.
So spending time sitting in front of a giant screen isn't the best use of time, or at least I think so.
If I had more time than I would.
When was the last time you went to the cinema?
I can remember it vividly, actually.
I took my other half to see Godzilla versus Kong at this huge mall where we used to live.
The whole plot was ridiculous and the characters were incommelier.
consequential. But I did like the experience of eating popcorn and laughing at how silly everything
was. And thankfully, the rows of seats were mostly empty, so it was okay to laugh out loud. Usually in
the cinema, there's this sort of a convention or unspoken rule that you don't make too much noise,
but we could, which was good. Did you usually go to the cinema when you were a child?
Oh, I definitely used to go far more often when I was younger. There wasn't much of a choice,
frankly, since my parents did all of the decision-making in that regard. Based on what I can remember
of it, though, I did enjoy myself. We used to watch the Disney classics, for example. So, yeah, we went,
and we went fairly often. Do you like to watch films alone or with your friends?
Well, I think it depends on the movie, really. Well, I like watching my favorite movie,
which is contact, by myself, because it's a film that's designed to provoke deep thinking,
which I think is best done alone.
On the other hand, there are some films which are just mindless fun,
like Starship Troopers, which you should definitely watch with friends
just to enjoy the insanity of the storyline and the setting.
However, if we think about the cinema,
then that's almost always a collective experience, isn't it?
You don't really go to the cinema by yourself.
What kinds of films do you prefer?
I think that depends entirely on how I'm feeling,
as it is for other people.
If I feel nostalgic, then I'll watch an older film,
even if I've seen it millions of times before.
Like, well, we talked about Disney classics, for example.
Or if I'm feeling like something new,
then I'll see what my friends are recommending.
Most recently, I developed a taste for found footage films
and mockumentaries, which are either quite mysterious or humorous,
and that's quite good because you're, well,
you get engrossed in the plot,
and you can lose yourself that way.
