
VonMagnum
Audioholic Chief
I watched Hotel Transylvania 3 in Atmos. It's pretty well done. Plenty of overhead effects, etc.
Those movies are so dumb, but we (kids, wife, me) love them.I watched Hotel Transylvania 3 in Atmos. It's pretty well done. Plenty of overhead effects, etc.
We do too. I do a lot of voice impressions and “blah blah blah is one, as well as many other Sandler bits.Those movies are so dumb, but we (kids, wife, me) love them.
Hmmmm captive state? I'll have to check that out. I love sci fi moviesI saw a movie last night that pleasantly surprised me - "Captive State" in DTS-HD MA.
It's a Sci-Fi Alien movie.
I dare say that I liked it a lot better than most movies I've seen.
But it's one of those movies where the final ending is where everything comes together, so don't expect a typical climax/resolution like most stories.
I used DTS NeuralX, and the sound effects were pretty good. There are definitely some overhead sound effects with NeuralX. The overall soundtrack is very good.
Venom is definitely NOT on my Atmos list. I was overall disappointed with the Atmos mix of Venom.I watched Venom 3D with Dolby Atmos muxed in.... Oddly, given how good the 5.1 soundtrack sounded with Neural X, the Atmos soundtrack was a bit of a letdown, IMO. Somehow it sounded more or less the same to me.... (audio memory isn't great, but somehow when it's 5.1 with some overhead it's impressive but when it's Atmos with "some" overhead, it's not). Still an odd, but fun movie either way.
I watched Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone in DTS:X again.... FANTASTIC. Just tons of stuff EVERYWHERE (loads of stuff I could hear BEHIND me, which I think sometimes is more rare than overhead to hear discretely, especially with a high back on the chair blocking the more casual light stuff from being noticed as much) and not just in the back of the room, but right behind me and in-between. Tons overhead too. It's one of my favorite movie series so I'm glad they did a great job with DTS:X (whereas Jurassic Park and Fast and Furious series don't have much overhead by comparison).
Wow. I am definitely re-watching all the Potter movies, but I didn’t even give the original BLade Runner a chance since it’s an older movie. Will have to check it out.I just watched BLADE RUNNER "The Final Cut" in Dolby Atmos. Sweet sweet overhead sounds....everywhere sounds. I have to say I think the use of overheads beats Blade Runner 2049 by a solid mile. Some sound effects had some clipping or something in them, but damn there was a lot on the ceiling. Of course, it was always raining in 85% of the film so thunder is up there almost constantly, but also flying cars, that "blimp-like" thing advertising off-world travel (all over the ceiling at different points),those dudes crawling on top of Decker's car trying to steal stuff off the roof (they were on my ceiling!) and Daryl Hannah doing acrobatic flips to name a few things. GREAT soundtrack.
Believe it or not, there are several people on Blu-Ray.com's forums that HATE the Atmos track (they want full grain movies with stereo or even mono sound if that's how it was in the theater.... NOW they're putting down THX as a standard (while the studios are going nuts with non-standard volume levels and dynamics once again with Disney being the worst offender and these guys are whining about THX? Yeah, they started selling out towards the end with all kinds of 'crap' rated THX that wasn't anything, but they helped sell a STANDARD to the cinemas (the home discs didn't have to be THX rated to benefit as it's the mastering that was the most important) and for awhile there you could almost leave your volume control in place (like you're supposed to be able to). Now Dolby's got a nice standard volume to base AVRs on, but for some reason I can't just leave my volume control at -10. Some movies need -14, some -10, some -6 and some at 0 even (especially if they're from Apple streaming).
I watched two more Harry Potter movies (again) in DTS:X. Sweet sweet soundtracks. They're AMAZING. The use of the rear channels is almost unprecedented compared to the average move, even the average Atmos movie. I heard more sounds traveling deep into the back of my 24' long room movie in those three movies than I've heard the rest of the year with everything else (although Blade Runner had some stuff back there too). I'm starting to think I've actually UNDERRATED Harry Potter in DTS:X. That was way more impressive overall than Fury. The whole series (used as one slot) would definitely be in the top 5 for me. I'd have to hear Jumanji and some others again to sort it out for sure in some kind of order, but damn....
With all of that, you are not distracted by what's actually happening on the screen? Those sound mixers need to be careful with their sound mixes.I watched Venom 3D with Dolby Atmos muxed in.... Oddly, given how good the 5.1 soundtrack sounded with Neural X, the Atmos soundtrack was a bit of a letdown, IMO. Somehow it sounded more or less the same to me.... (audio memory isn't great, but somehow when it's 5.1 with some overhead it's impressive but when it's Atmos with "some" overhead, it's not). Still an odd, but fun movie either way.
I watched Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone in DTS:X again.... FANTASTIC. Just tons of stuff EVERYWHERE (loads of stuff I could hear BEHIND me, which I think sometimes is more rare than overhead to hear discretely, especially with a high back on the chair blocking the more casual light stuff from being noticed as much) and not just in the back of the room, but right behind me and in-between. Tons overhead too. It's one of my favorite movie series so I'm glad they did a great job with DTS:X (whereas Jurassic Park and Fast and Furious series don't have much overhead by comparison).
I dunno. Are you distracted by every sound around you in the real world so you cannot function at all, frozen in time by distractions OR are you immersed and everything seems normal? So when you watch a movie and someone flies past the camera into the back of the room is it MORE distracting to hear nothing (which is shocking to the brain because in the real world it SHOULD make a sound throughout the room as it passes overhead or you find it more distracting when it does make a sound as it flies overhead even though that's what your brain expects in the real world?With all of that, you are not distracted by what's actually happening on the screen? Those sound mixers need to be careful with their sound mixes.
Haha. That sounds like a psychiatric evaluation of Phonophobia.I dunno. Are you distracted by every sound around you in the real world so you cannot function at all...
Don’t worry VM. A55 isn’t happy no matter what. First it’s no content, then crappy mixes, and NOW too much going on. Pain in the A55... even more than I am!I dunno. Are you distracted by every sound around you in the real world so you cannot function at all, frozen in time by distractions OR are you immersed and everything seems normal? So when you watch a movie and someone flies past the camera into the back of the room is it MORE distracting to hear nothing (which is shocking to the brain because in the real world it SHOULD make a sound throughout the room as it passes overhead or you find it more distracting when it does make a sound as it flies overhead even though that's what your brain expects in the real world?
Clearly, my answer is we need more realistic surround mixes, not less. I'm tired of seeing forest scenes in movies (especially ones with Atmos) and you can only hear birds in the front of the room when that is not what you'd hear if you were actually standing in the forest for real. Why would it be more distracting to sound like what your brain expects a forest to sound like in the real world than some one dimensional sound in the front of the room only?
Not distracted by real world sounds, but annoyed. If I'm trying to read, I don't want to hear an infant crying in the backroom because then I can't concentrate or focus in on what I'm reading.I dunno. Are you distracted by every sound around you in the real world so you cannot function at all, frozen in time by distractions OR are you immersed and everything seems normal? So when you watch a movie and someone flies past the camera into the back of the room is it MORE distracting to hear nothing (which is shocking to the brain because in the real world it SHOULD make a sound throughout the room as it passes overhead or you find it more distracting when it does make a sound as it flies overhead even though that's what your brain expects in the real world?
Clearly, my answer is we need more realistic surround mixes, not less. I'm tired of seeing forest scenes in movies (especially ones with Atmos) and you can only hear birds in the front of the room when that is not what you'd hear if you were actually standing in the forest for real. Why would it be more distracting to sound like what your brain expects a forest to sound like in the real world than some one dimensional sound in the front of the room only?
I don't think your criticisms are totally inaccurate. I'm starting to feel the same way about HDR and Dolby Vision, gimmicks. They make content look artificial and not natural. They hype formats like immersive audio, 4K HDR/DV through the roof and then its a let down we they don't meet expectations.Don’t worry VM. A55 isn’t happy no matter what. First it’s no content, then crappy mixes, and NOW too much going on. Pain in the A55... even more than I am!