Quote:
Originally Posted by pavulon
It seemed to me that the film consciously tried to get some details dead nuts correct. For example, incoming rifle rounds would impact and the resulting audio would come a split second before the audio of the shots' being fired. Also, the delay seemed tied to the distance from which the shot came and the reverse was true when protagonists fired. I cannot remember experiencing that in other movies.
disclaimer: I hope I have this correct.
|
The audio of virtually all movies and TV shows is pure fantasy. Explosions almost always have the boom and the visual at the exact same moment, even in space where it would be totally silent.
Cars have screeching tires in the rain or dirt, or snow. Almost all cars have squeaking brakes. They are not documentarys, just a movie. Reality has nothing to do with it.