Talk to the projectionist at the theater. Ask him to refund your dough.
The boom mic is a common visitor into the top of frame during the filming of most feature films as it is impossible to 100% keep it out of frame, but it is high enough up so that if the projctionist frames it the way he's supposed to, you don't end up seeing it at all.
If he frames it wrong, you end up seeing it dipping into frame all movie long, which, I agree, is a total drag.
Talk to the projectionist at the theater. Ask him to refund your dough.
The boom mic is a common visitor into the top of frame during the filming of most feature films as it is impossible to 100% keep it out of frame, but it is high enough up so that if the projctionist frames it the way he's supposed to, you don't end up seeing it at all.
If he frames it wrong, you end up seeing it dipping into frame all movie long, which, I agree, is a total drag.