Fotch, I can understand why you say that. Many theaters today are little more than teen hangouts with video games and pizza shops which don't play very many movies with substance at all. To be honest, I don't like watching movies in that atmosphere, either.
Add to that, most movie theaters are staffed by minimum wage high school and college students who don't give a damn about their jobs. They'd just as soon run film through a meat grinder as they would properly thread a projector.
It's no wonder that people are flocking away from theaters and staying home. Confidentially, I do it too.
If I might suggest, an independent or repertory theater might be more your style. They show better films in a more adult atmosphere and they hire more competent employees.
I find it interesting to think that many people will spend $1,000 on a flat screen TV, $500 on a home theater sound system and another $250 on a Blu-Ray player, not considering that they could have spent $50 per week for almost 9 months, watching movies in a theater, before they would repay their investment in a home theater system. They don't have to go to the video store. (Which might be just as far away as a movie theater.) They won't have to pop their own popcorn or make their own snacks. They won't have to worry about hooking up and operating the equipment. All they'll have to do is walk in, sit down and watch a movie. When they are done, they don't even have to clean up after themselves. They can just leave their cups in the cup holders and their empty popcorn bags on the floor.
Certainly watch a movie wherever you want to. I just think that the movie industry is doing itself a big disservice excluding customers which provide long-term income in favor of short-term profits. Why can't they keep an eye out for long term income which will keep them solvent for the future AND profit from the latest trends? The empty suits that run the movie business are very soon going to find themselves also running a bunch of empty theaters if they aren't careful.