  I've worked in enough movie theaters to know Monday is when the bookings come in. Eagerly, I checked urlLink Fandango and urlLink Fahrenheit 911's website to see if the urlLink Regal Entertainment Group dominated region I live in will get a copy of F911 .
Sadly, my fears were confirmed. I would like to catch a 7 p.m. showing at the 13 screen multiplex across the street from my office on Friday, but won't have that option. I wouldn't mind the 20 minute drive to the next town over to a 16 screen multiplex. Again, REG has eliminated that option as well. I will spend an hours drive into downtown Baltimore to the Charles Theater or a drive north to Harrisburg's Midtown Cinemas. If I want a theater with better seating and projection, I can drive a little over an hour east to Regal Oaks 24 where 1 screen was spared to display this film.
It's really quite sad that the small cities and large towns in middle America are not being offered a chance to see this film. I don't know what the specifics stats are, but Pennsylvania has lost more troops in Iraq than any other state in the union. Those boys and girls aren't just coming from Philadelphia. They are coming from the "Red" counties in between Philly and Pittsburgh.
Shouldn't their families have a right to watch this. Another issue I have with this distribution pattern (I hold REG's Booking system responsible not the films distributors) is that the arthouse's which dominate the platform distribution don't have automated ticket reservation systems. While I'm willing to risk an hours drive for tickets, I'd rather know they were secured with an online Moviefone-like system. Why is the establiment making it so hard to access this film. After all, it's just a movie right? 
