|
|
 |
|
12-17-2003, 03:19 PM
|
#2 of 33
|
|
Location: Rocky Mountains
Join Date: Jul 2001
Local Time: 12:37 PM
Local Date: 10-12-2008
Posts: 3,010
|
This happened at my screening. You could mostly hear it when the music held a note for a while, you would hear it pop in and out. I just took it as something wrong with the speakers or print. This was in an Imax theatre. It really pulled me out of the movie though, as great as it was.
|
|
|
12-17-2003, 03:26 PM
|
#3 of 33
|
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2000
Local Time: 07:37 PM
Local Date: 10-12-2008
Posts: 84
|
whoever has had this happen want to list the city and what theater company? I am kind of curious since this happened to someone else in a completely different theater.
|
|
|
12-17-2003, 03:26 PM
|
#4 of 33
|
|
Member
Join Date: Mar 1999
Local Time: 07:37 PM
Local Date: 10-12-2008
Posts: 1,314
|
Interesting. I experienced bad audio pops/dropouts during FOTR EE a couple of weeks ago. TTT EE was fine, though.
Cinerama Dome, Hollywood, Dolby Digital sound (I'm seeing ROTK there at the weekend, I'll report if it happens then)
|
|
|
12-17-2003, 03:34 PM
|
#5 of 33
|
|
Member
Join Date: Jan 2002
Local Time: 02:37 PM
Local Date: 10-12-2008
Posts: 380
|
I thought this was my imagination, but it has happened a couple of times. Most recently at Last Samurai at Carmike Oakdale 20, not sure if DTS or Dolby Digital though.
|
|
|
12-17-2003, 04:35 PM
|
#7 of 33
|
|
Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Local Time: 02:37 PM
Local Date: 10-12-2008
Posts: 148
|
It sounds like what you were hearing were digital dropouts in the sound. The major digital sound systems (DTS, Dolby Digital, and SDDS)all use an analog backup (the soundtrack physically printed on the film) in case of errors that cause temporary loss of the digital sound. The change in sound-source can be distracting, but at least sound is not totally lost.
I'm not sure which type of digital system you experienced, but at one time the DTS version of ROTK was going to be issued on 3 CD's which was going to require some theatres with older equipment to have to manually change out a CD during movie playback. This issue might have been corrected, however.
Hope this helps!
Bill S.
|
|
|
12-17-2003, 05:22 PM
|
#8 of 33
|
|
Location: Rocky Mountains
Join Date: Jul 2001
Local Time: 12:37 PM
Local Date: 10-12-2008
Posts: 3,010
|
Imax screening, Colorado Center, Denver.
Not sure what sound format they use in that venue.
|
|
|
12-17-2003, 06:16 PM
|
#9 of 33
|
|
Member
Join Date: Feb 1999
Local Time: 03:37 PM
Local Date: 10-12-2008
Posts: 1,593
|
The theater I'm working at test screened the print last night, and we had equipment issues, but the source material on the print seemed to be fine. Our issue was a bad amp or speaker in the center channel, but the sound never dropped out from the print, nor were there any digital artifacts - bass and surrounds were excellent throughout.
I have noticed that if the Dolby Digital reader is misthreaded, digital sound can drop out unexpectedly, as well.
|
|
|
12-17-2003, 07:35 PM
|
#10 of 33
|
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 1999
Local Time: 03:37 PM
Local Date: 10-12-2008
Posts: 2,814
|
Poor alignment and/or operation of the equipment. Or a defective print. It's not a deliberate attempt to distort the sound.
|
|
| |