On 21/09/17 11:24, Huge wrote:
> On 2017-09-21, Martin Brown wrote:
>>
>> Depends how big you want to go and how much you are prepared to pay for
>> the kit.
>
To watch a great movie and enjoy the experience "all most like being
there", ye need to get into some sort of edge of dream trance state.
All the surrounding goings on around your TV set, phones ringing, SWMBO
screaming, children brawling, fire alarms screeching; are neatly
switched out by the brain focused by whatever depth of field lens "3D"
effect the cameraman has applied, and similarly for the sound field,
stereo or whatever.
It works up to a point with Soaps and even very small screen TVs where
the cast of, say, Eastenders suddenly becomes some weird subliminal
extension to your local family, and ye now have more reasons to worry to
the grave about their deadly and dreary life issues. Happily though, I
divorced the lot of them after 26 years of unmissed episode acquaintance.
However, when I was young & watching Superman in the cinema, I'd come
out of the place with a crazy kind of feeling that actually _I_ could
fly as well. Psychologists / Psychiatrists probably have a name for it.
The "superman" effect doesn't happen with my 40" TV and all the 5.1
Dolby / DTS gubbins.
I don't watch it in the dark and I don't really enjoy the shock of "all
most like being there" next to a bass belching explosion from a
fictionally deployed nuclear device tossed out of a car window by the
Terminator - so haven't invested in a Sub to amuse the neighbours.
> At least until you realise that the movies are just as shit, no matter
> how big and loud they are.
Films I really enjoy are either inspirational storytellings or technical
production works of art. The latter look / sound great on my AV kit,
passed on by someone who had a fussy wife that didn't like wires and the
mess of boxes.
Other films admittedly were just a waste of a quid from the charity shop
- and I hope they made more of that coin toss than I had from that DVD.
For that reason, I have a 95% rule of avoiding buying "replay" DVDs from
Poundland.
--
Adrian C