I agree, but I wonder if it's something new or something we forgot about due to the pandemic lockdowns. It's not entertainment, it's something you want to be over because it is actually nasty. This is now so bad that it's actively preventing people from going to movie theatres because the sound experience is positively disagreeable. There is no justification for this and people who try to make thoise justifications need to be slapped around until they realise that they're not mixing sound for themselves and their own state of hearing that's long been ruined by constant exposure to ultra-loud mixing stages. Now, I am fully aware that anyone from the audio-related disciplines of film and television production will be replete with excuses for this. I am not alone, and I'm not kidding I strongly suspect Dune has the potential to create hearing damage. With enormous regret, decided that I'd rather see it under circumstances where I wasn't likely to suffer hearing damage. Horrible experience.Ĭonsidered going to see No Time to Die. Was massively distracted by the unpleasantly over-loud sound almost painful. Quite apart from the terrible dialogue mix, my lasting impression is of everything being so loud it was actively unpleasant, and I felt the need to protect my ears. I'm sitting here listening to Zimmer's score to Dune, which is a piece of music I barely recognise because the first time I heard it, it was so loud I had my fingers in my ears.
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