Sounds as though the 'sound engineer' didn't understand his craft or run a proper sound check? I hate DSP settings and regard them as Harajuku 'Japanese Cosplay' for ignorant 'gai jin' tourist audiences. I prefer a 'straight wire with gain'.
Speaking of 'real DSP'... Have you experienced 'SENSURROUND' in the original version of the film Earthquake (1974)? Probably long before your time. I have. Outside on the pavement waiting for the next showing, about 30 yards down the queue for the Empire Leicester Square, London, in the middle of the pedestrianised precinct, we felt what seemed like a London Underground train passing below us. SENSURROUND, by Westrex, was a very complex intermodulation of several low-frequency and subsonic frequencies which had the effect of causing the rows of seats in the auditorium to oscillate like a bass string when it was switched on, during special timings during the film. (In initial Chinese Theatre, Hollywood, test screenings, they took out the whole original exponential horn, midrange effect, because the audience couldn't stand 20 kilowatts <125db of deafening explosions, etc. They also put up netting above the audience which frightened them even further - with the possibility that the ceiling might come down). Lots of women in the Empire auditorium screamed during this sonic earthquake-effect experience. It was a bit too much for many people (110-115 db of rumbling, gut wrenching bass). Sadly, the DVD doesn't do it justice. It was also used in and The Battle of Midway (1976) and Rollercoaster (1977). None of which have been re-recorded with the Sensurround effect despite all being released in Blu-ray...
The trouble was that it was impossible for Sensurround to be staged in emerging multiplexes (apart from requiring huge 6ft cube subs, driven by 7-10Kw amplification, typically 4 in the auditorium, with 4 x 25" 600 WRMS Italian RTR drivers with 6" voice coils in each, as was the case with the Empire, Leicester Square, ) because it would interfere with other films in the same auditorium, such as The Godfather where patrons complained about the building shaking during a quiet part of their film. I saw one of these monsters, with air cooling like a single-cylinder motorcycle engine head, being re-coned in Wembley Loudspeakers when they were in Hammersmith - I could have bought it for £100 in 1979. If I'd only known... Blue Aran sell a similar Precision Devices 24 inch driver here in the UK for around £776 or neodymium magnet version for £856.