I experienced this in past years quite often, and it suprises me that it still comes up today occasionally - some cinemas are not technically able to adjust playback volume between preshow/trailers and main feature. While some may say that it would be good if cinemas should not be able to adjust volume at all, this is simply not realistic. The cinema operator is the last one in line, and the only one in direct relation with a 'potentially' suffering audience (and suffering not only because of too loud, but also too soft playback).
Just today a thread came up on film-tech about a cinema in florida that is operating for two years or so, with no knowledge to set different volume between preshow and feature. What does that mean? It means that usually, the main features there will be played at a manually set preshow level ...
Not so easy - most mainstream DCPs - the only reliable source for theatrical mixes - are encrypted, and it is not possible to perform an audio analysis on the file level (unlike trailers, which are always unencrypted). One would need to install a realtime/logging hardware 5.1/7.1 R128/LEQ meter in the booth. Not many cinemas are willing to invest that money. There are a few papers with detailed numbers for a bunch of mainstream movies, (as the one by Ion Allen), but those that I know are often still based on film (35mm) based sound tracks. The overall quality and dynamic ambition of high end mixes have certainly improved with the digital cinema rollout. Yes, there are still many that suck.But it'd still love to see some numeric comparisons (textform would be fine) of current day movies.
- Carsten