This can sometimes be aggravated by the sound being set for surround which assumes a centre speaker that might not be there. Most of the surround sound algorithms will put most of the dialogue through the centre speaker. I used to have surround sound in my old house (can't be arsed setting the front room around the TV in new place) and I could turn up volume/ratio on centre speaker which helped a fair bit.notfatcat wrote: Tue Jul 27, 2021 4:42 pmYep, a bizarre phenomena. I stopped watching Gone Girl after about 5 minutes for a similar reason - I just couldn't understand the dialogue (can't remember if it was music or background noise that was disproportionately way too loud).sockwithaticket wrote: Tue Jul 27, 2021 12:56 pm Uneven sound levels in TV and film.
You have it set to the right level for the dialogue and then some music or something will play at about twice the volume leaving you scrabbling to turn it down and then by the time you've managed it we're back to just dialogue and needing it at the previous level.
But it's also to do with current trend of mumbling - Sean Harris is a fecking nightmare, I've usually got to put the subtitles on.