I'd have thought that the problem would largely solve itself with the move from theater complexes containing a smaller number of larger auditoria, to a larger number of smaller ones, with the growing popularity of the hybrid movie theater/restaurant. A 16-plex with 100 seats in each house gives you a lot more programming flexibility than an 8-plex with 200 seats per house, enabling you to offer both the OCAP and CCAP versions of a movie at attractive show times.
I think HOH subtitles are used for home viewing more, because the audio quality in a typical TV is usually pretty nasty, and there will also be restrictions on how loud you can have it. If you live in an apartment with thin walls, playing a 7.1 system at the SMPTE RP-200 reference level is not an option, unless you really want to p!ss off your neighbors. Likewise, when my young son is trying to sleep immediately above the living room, if I'm going to watch a movie, it will be almost silent with the CCAPs on (or, as Scott suggests, actually silent, with the amplifier not even switched on. I saw The Iron Horse this way on Saturday). None of those restrictions apply in a movie theater.
If demand for OCAPs in theaters is increasing, it has to be because either audio mixing in movies is not being done competently, or poor hearing is becoming a major public health issue. We all know that a properly tuned 5.1 or 7.1 theater audio system should be able to reproduce intelligible dialogue without any problem. It was possible to do that using tube amplification and the Academy curve of the 1930s!
It was claimed in the 19-teens and '20s that movies were responsible for a huge improvement in literacy rates among populations where the ability to read was by no means universal, thanks to the desire to be able to read the intertitles. The USSR even had linguistics experts vet the text of intertitles (Eisenstein and Kuleshov both mention this in some of their writings) with this in mind.
Originally posted by Andrew Thomas
If demand for OCAPs in theaters is increasing, it has to be because either audio mixing in movies is not being done competently, or poor hearing is becoming a major public health issue. We all know that a properly tuned 5.1 or 7.1 theater audio system should be able to reproduce intelligible dialogue without any problem. It was possible to do that using tube amplification and the Academy curve of the 1930s!
Originally posted by Scott Norwood
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