You might be alluding to ported vs sealed. Typically speaking, it is opined that a sealed sub is better for music and a ported sub is better for movies.
Opinions are great and all, but maybe it would be easier to grasp and potentially less misleading to the OP if we stick to the facts rather than common memes that may or may not hold water.
For a given enclosure volume, a sealed alignment will result in a higher f3 and 12db/oct slope roll off, where the port will result in a lower f3 but steeper 24db/oct roll off.
Steeper slopes equate to greater phase shifts, but provided this occurs down low enough we're pretty insensitive to it. This is worth considering if trying to blend ported mains with subs; they should be crossed well above their inherent f3 to avoid unnecessarily lumpy response.
Shallower slopes allow useful bass below f3 when cabin gain is taken into effect; ported designs do not benefit as much from cabin gain because...
Ported enclosures are resonant devices, and below f3 the port and active driver quickly go out of phase (hence the steeper roll off), with the result being excessive driver excursion with no added output at those frequencies. A hpf takes care of this, and many of the big ported subs employ such protection. Somewhat related, above f3, at frequencies where the port is doing most of the work, the active driver moves very little. This generally reduces distortion at those frequencies.
Neither sealed nor ported alignments care if they're reproducing music or a movie soundtrack. The "best" choice is determined by the dictates and limitations of each particular person's room(biggest factor)/desired goals/budget/WAF and whatever else.