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Author
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Topic: Destroyed soundtrack on Beowulf
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Mike Olpin
Chop Chop!
Posts: 1852
From: Dallas, TX
Registered: Jan 2002
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posted 03-01-2008 10:43 AM
It is possible that a deep scratch is present on the soundtrack, however, It is also possible that you have a problem with your analog sound. To test it, play a reel of something in Dolby Digital and block the 701 soundhead with a piece of paper. This will simulate the fail condition which occurred on Beowulf. The processor should drop to SR type sound (format 05) automatically. If it drops to A-type (format 04) you'll need to adjust a setting.
Once you verify that it drops to format 05, go ahead and listen to format 05 in the auditorium. If you notice the same level of hiss and distortion, then it is your equipment, and a technician will have to perform an alignment for you. If the sound in format 05 is clear, with clear dialog anchored firmly to the center channel, than It was your print, and you have nothing to worry about.
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Bruce Hansen
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 847
From: Stone Mountain, GA, USA
Registered: Dec 1999
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posted 03-01-2008 06:14 PM
Dumb question, does your sound head have a red light excitor source, or is it still white light? Newer prints have cyan optical tracks, and require a read light (no inferred) reader. If you run a cyan track on a sound head with a white light reader, the sound will be very low, if you bring up the level, there will be a lot of hiss, and the dolby SR decoder will miss track causing pumping and breathing. Being a college you may be running mainly older films that have silver tracks that work fine on white light readers, could this be your first cyan print?
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 03-01-2008 07:41 PM
I'm with Richard - seems like a print issue, because:
- Other analogue SVA prints play fine, so it clearly isn't an A-chain problem; - You've got a red reader, so it clearly isn't a trying to play a cyan track through an exciter bulb problem; - You didn't notice heavy dirt or scratching on the picture, or report related symptoms (e.g. more crud than usual needing to be cleaned out of the film path at the end of each reel) that would suggest unusually heavy physical damage to the print.
Did the problem persist over more than one reel? If not, then I'd say it is almost certainly a photographic problem with the way the affected reel(s) were printed and processed. If it did, then this is probably ruled out, because as a general rule individual reels are printed in separate batches - all the reel 1s, then all the reel 2s, etc. This problem came up when the 1999 The Mummy was released in Britain. All the reels except 2 were imported US prints for the British release, but the reel 2s were new prints made here, because there were a few minor changes to one scene in order to satisfy the censors' demands for a lower certificate. Thanks to a lab slip-up, some of the prints had a normal English language Dolby Digital and SDDS track, but the analogue SR track was of the German dub. You can imagine the reaction that caused in cinemas which didn't have digital that Friday afternoon...
So if you've got a consistent problem over all the reels in a release print, then my guess is that either it was damaged at a previous cinema which ran it on a platter or tower, or, if you're running long-play too, there's an issue with your equipment. If you're running changeovers and the problem affects the whole show but not any other film, it has to be something a previous cinema did to the print.
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