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Originally Posted by Sword of Whedon
When DTS preps the track, yes they cook it. Nowadays, hardly anyone sends their stuff to DTS for encoding
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Yes, I am aware of that.
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Home DD tracks are typically modified to sound good when folded down to 2.0, and/or cooked to pump the bass
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the theatrical tracks are mixed in a way so that they could be downmixed to 2channel, why, for the backup of the digital tracks in the theater, so it does not sound horrablie when the analog comes on, I'm not saying it's seamless, but it's done well enough.
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Look at LOTR-FOTR or Blade 2. Even on the FOTR:EE the DD track is still modified, listen to the arrows in Moria.
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that make no sense, how would listening to the arrows make me know it's modified?
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The DTS is what I experienced theatrically
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people have always believed that the dts track is the same as the dts in the cinema, this is completly untrue, the digital formats in theaters will almost always use the exact same tracks
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We're seeing more and more of these DD "home theater mixes"
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these "home theatre mixes" are what the dts tracks would use if the producers of the disc choose to have a dts track, ie The Lion King, in R1 the home theatre mix was encoded in dolby digital while in R2 it was encoded in a dts track, besides disney, i know of no studios that have put out more than a few of these type of mixes