Having trouble hearing Oppenheimer dialogue?
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 13:10 last edited by
I've heard this from several people. The director calls it artistic. I call it lazy and inconsiderate.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 13:13 last edited by
A common theme in so much of today's movies and TV.
Turn
up my hearing aidson subtitles. -
wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 13:24 last edited by
That'll be annoying. I often have difficulty hearing dialog. I guess I'll wait, to watch it at home, with subtitles.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 13:26 last edited by
Yes, subtitles are always on here.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 13:40 last edited by
My grandad used to complain about this in the 1970's.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 13:46 last edited by
I read a review that said the director did a much better job making the audio intelligible than in his previous movies.
I don’t recall it being an issue when I saw it.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 13:48 last edited by
I worried that Oppenheimer’s dialogue would be muffled as in several other Nolan movies such as Interstellar, but fortunately, this time he’s reined in his preference for muddy, booming soundtracks. Still, despite the welcome clarity of the sound, he layers a nervous modernist orchestral score under every line, so you might want to await subtitles.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 13:48 last edited by
I think it’s worth watching in the theatre just for the trinity scene alone.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 15:35 last edited by
Funny, my hearing is fine but I often turn on subtitles at home too. Even during some of the marvel movies (like Thor) some of the accents and norse terms sound like gibberish to me.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2023, 16:02 last edited by
That's a handicap up there in Viking country.
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wrote on 5 Aug 2023, 01:29 last edited by
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wrote on 5 Aug 2023, 01:37 last edited by
It is pretty clear here.
Link to video