[Magdalen] Realism in Television.
Allan Carr
allanc25 at gmail.com
Mon Apr 27 20:58:11 UTC 2015
If you turn on captions, you'll get used to them after a while.They're
certainly useful for whispers. Sometimes they cover up things you may want
to see, like in dancing, ice skating, and the like. Then I turn the
captions off temporarily.
On Mon, Apr 27, 2015 at 12:25 PM, Cantor03--- via Magdalen <
magdalen at herberthouse.org> wrote:
>
> Has anyone else noticed the trend in lighting television shows
> that tends to be Rembrandt like in that there is some spotlighting of the
> major action persons, and often the rest of the scene is in deep shadow?
>
> This tendency is especially characteristic of crime/police/detective
> shows, but it can be seen in other offerings, even sit-coms.
>
> As I age, this dim lighting is increasingly a problem.
>
> Also, and probably a corollary of the above is the casual dialogue
> delivered
> by the actors in what seems much of the time a whisper. I realize
> we are beyond the live stage shows where actors belted out their dialogue
> without the benefit of microphones, but there must be a happy medium.
>
> The result is that I turn up the volume control, only to have the infernal
> ads blast out to the point of breaking the windows.
>
> I realize "The Honeymooners" are gone, and modern television shows
> are not a Shakespearian stage, but it's to the point in lighting and
> dialogue where any further reduction is absurdity.
>
>
>
> David Strang - who never watches television before 6 PM.
>
--
Allan Carr
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