Thanks for pointing this out. Although I've been officially (and rigorously) diagnosed as autistic myself, I'm the sort of person more likely to be disturbed by inappropriate audience noises than to cause them. It's one of the reasons I stopped going to cinemas about 20 years ago. I remember particularly a National Film Theatre (BFI) screening of THE GOLEM (1920) which was received by the other audience members as if it were a non-stop slapstick comedy.therewillbeblus wrote: Tue Oct 03, 2023 4:42 am The spectrum is so wide though, with many misinformed symptoms attached, that we should be careful about pre-diagnosing people as "very likely" to be on it just because of stereotyped observable behavior by non-professionals...
Even at home, I've been known to complain about my partner's heavy breathing during (mainstream) films and, despite the fact I also have a diagnosis of severe hearing loss in both ears, the constant chuntering noise made by my Sony S-3700 as it plays discs is often distracting to me (apparently, not a faulty one as several reviews of this model complain of it too). Extreme sensitivity to noise (and/or light, taste, smell, touch) is of course very common among autistic people.
