Have you ever thought of the similarities between the cinema and the theatre The cinema has learnt a great deal from the theatre about presentation. Gone are the days when crowds were packed on wooden benches in tumbledown buildings to gape at the antics of silent, jerking figures on a screen, where some poor pianist made (1)______ frantic efforts to translate the drama into music. These days it is quite easier to find a cinema that surpasses a theatre in luxury. Even in (2)______ small easy villages, cinemas are spacious, well lit and well-ventilated places where one can sit for comfort. The projectionist has been (3)______ trained to give the audience time to prepare themselves for the film they are to see. Talk drops to a whisper and then fades out together. (4)______ As soon as the cinema is in darkness, spotlights are focused on the curtains which are drawn slowly apart, often to the accompany of (5)______ music, to reveal the title of the film. Everything has been carefully contrived so that the spectator will never actually see the naked screen which will remind to him all too sharply that what he is about (6)______ to see is nothing merely shadows flickering on a white board. (7)______ However much the cinema tries to simulate from the conditions in a theatre (8)______ , it never fully succeeds. Nothing can be equal to the awe and sense of hushing expectation which is felt by a theatre audience as (9)______ the curtain is slowly risen. (10)______