Blame the sound designer. You can emulate whispering without altering the volume.
Very few media players have autobalancers.
Comic Strips is a community for those who love comic stories.
The rules are simple:
Web of links
Blame the sound designer. You can emulate whispering without altering the volume.
Very few media players have autobalancers.
Part of it could either be that they’re not spending the time for a home release audio mix, don’t want to for purity’s sake or I’ve seen issues with trying to condense surround soundscapes down to stereo.
It all comes down to dynamic range and they should be using all of it for theatrical release and then remastering for home release.
TV shows do not get a pass. Cinephile audio engineers that think the vast majority of their listeners will have home theater setups are just plain delusional.
The way they do dynamic range in movie theaters sucks too. I have to wear earplugs because it's so loud.
Yes!
I may get a shit sound experience at home, but at least I have an opportunity for an even worse sound experience at my local theater, first.
No, blame the streaming companies. Dynamic range is a known standard. All they need is:
Upsides:
Downsides:
Ooooh! I didn't know streaming services were messing with customers this badly! Yikes!
Glad I don't use them!🏴☠️
I should really set up EasyEffects on my SteamDeck - that's the device I use to watch movies on my TV
One of the main reasons i watch everything with subtitles, people used to be amused when i would watch an english movie with english subtitles, then they got apartments with poor sound proofed walls and floors, they weren't so amused anymore.
My gf and I have been doing this for more than 20 years.
This wasn't a thing a couple of decades ago. To this day I can still watch movies from the eighties just fine, but need subtitles for anything made within the last 10 years.
I'm sorry but, the 80s were more than a couple of decades ago. 1986 was 40 years ago.
Also 20 years ago this was still an issue. Plasma screen TVs were becoming accessible to consumers and surround sound was taking off in the home video space. TV was mixed for surround cinematic but not everyone had a surround setup yet. They had to write laws that said the tv commercials couldn't be louder than the main content of the channel (though these laws were largely unenforced).
Please stop reminding me how old I am.
This is so common and so irritating that it literally makes me not look forward to watching movies, particularly at home in a shared living space. I don't even watch many movies anymore because it's annoying watching with subtitles all the time.
This is what getting old looks like people, take note.
That thing that mildly annoys you right now? It won't go away, it will get worse, then your intolerance of thing will lead to avoiding the thing. Next thing you know, someone is asking you "Did you see the new Sooperfoob and Jerry movie? it's amazing! Best one of the franchise!" and you're going to be like... 😶
FYI this is one of the main differences between the Hollywood and German soundtracks.
Here it's mixed far better to listen in stereo while in surround cinematic you need to turn the front speaker up, if you have that system. And it doesn't translate well to stereo.
Hollywood mixes are just awful, have been for decades now. You can go to the theater and have quiet voices and blown-out eardrums from a race scene.
I have a middle-to-upper-end 5.1 setup and have to fiddle with it like hell to keep the voices audible without ruining the action scenes.
Might want to put your link in fedi format: !nonpolitical_comics@piefed.social
The way it is now people have to search their instance in their app to subscribe.
Ok, I’ll try to keep this in mind
And this is why I, a genius, watch my content with subtitles. So I can keep the volume at a perpetually low level whilst still understanding what is being said even when it isn’t in a language I speak.
I suspect it is all a trick to teach people how to use a compressor
Older movies tended to have audio mixes where the dialogue was clear even when loud things were happening, people shouldn't need to use a compressor.
Subtitles can save you a lot of headaches.
Our TV has a shit sound distribution so it is literally like in the meme and our solution became to always have subtitles on even now that we live in a place with soundproof walls and no longer have to mind neighbors.
By default I enable Loudness Equalization, which makes soft sounds louder and loud sounds softer.
I don't care about the dynamic range if you can't understand what they are saying.
I had such a situation years ago. I was listening to Mike Oldfields "Tubular Bells II" on headphones. For the first time. There is a sequence where the music stops, and a child is telling something. I turned up the volume to hear it, and got the last words "and nothing was ever heard of him again, except for the sound of tu-bu-lar bells", and then came BANG the promised bell...
Good ol dolby