It's not cheating if I can absorb the movie while doing other things. My face is still facing the screen at all times. My autism allows me to focus on multiple things at once if I do it right, and if I do miss something I can just rewind. On top of this, I had a lot of practice with it. So no, I don't count it if I don't focus, but if I have two eyes I can use one each for two purposes.
Eh, it
is cheating. You can 'absorb' it, but you can't experience it the same way you would if you gave it your full, unadulterated attention. The film's atmosphere is taking a huge blow because of this. It's impossible to get engaged and mesmerized at the same level when you half-watch a film. This is tricky because people think that if they can get the gist of it and follow along, there's no difference between watching and half-watching a film, but there's a huge difference.
You could technically say that half-watching is similar to watching films when tired, but I believe these are two different things. I think that intention matters a lot, and somebody who's tired and misses details in a film usually doesn't intend to miss them. They miss them due to their state they're not necessarily responsible for. Of course, if you're tired, it's better to go to sleep, but sometimes you become tired in the middle of the film and you'd rather finish it in this state than finish it the next day. Starting to watch a film with the intent of half-watching it while working or doing chores means you're more responsible and more at fault.
It's like falling asleep behind the wheel because you started feeling lightheaded during a ride versus because you sat behind the wheel drunk.
Yep, you can rewind, but rewinding means you're taking yourself out of the film, breaking something that is supposed to be experienced in an unbreakable manner without any pauses. If you intentionally and directly sully your experience, you're responsible for it, and it's cheating your way into watching a film by experiencing it in a half-assed manner.
That’s disappointing that he doesn’t really watch them. I don’t see how he can can get anything out them if he’s not properly paying attention to them.
To each their own, I suppose
Yeah, I'm still giving him the benefit of the doubt since I only saw other people say he said he does that, but I never saw him claim that. That being said, he has a wife and two kids, and yet spends over 10 hours a day watching films. He's unemployed, though, so this is doable, but doing this every day with no breaks for years sounds exhausting. I watch less than him and need to take a day off from time to time!