As a special project for myself, I wanted take the Cinema DTS sound mix and sync it to the Blu Ray release. Through the good graces of Jetrell Fo, I’ve obtained the film’s Cinema DTS CD-ROMs from his collection. I was able to extract the discs and gain access to each of the reel’s audio files---each reel contains 6 mono wave files representing the film’s surround soundtrack (Front Left Channel, Front Right Channel, Center Channel, Lower Frequency Effects Channel, Surround Left Channel, and Surround Right Channel).
I’ve selected a reel to work-on—one that has a well-rounded mix of normal speaking dialogue and aggressive sound effects, but not involving the film’s climatic sequences. It's the one where the ship hits the iceberg. The software I’ve used were the free Audacity and a high-end one, not free, I’ve been using for over a decade, Steinberg’s WaveLab 4.0.
After making my syncs of the 6 mono waves to the clip from the Blu Ray and lowering the sound level of the surround channel by 3 decibels, the real work was in the center channel. In it, there were passages where the sound level was very soft, like the dialogue; and others where the sound level was very high, like the sound effects. As is, the viewer would have to turn the volume up and down every 5 seconds, especially when the film’s climatic part comes in. By applying a limiter and raising the gain, I was able to get the center channel to an acceptable level…
…however, that is my perception. This is where you all come in. I need another pair of hears to check-out my work before I work on the remaining 9 reels.
So, here it: a sample of one reel—an MKV video that contains a rip from the Blu Ray with 2 audio options that feature the following mixes:
https://mega.nz/#!7sFmRKzR!1qdybyFeaqpO2...h5R8TsGLvE
Thank you, all, for your time and help.
I’ve selected a reel to work-on—one that has a well-rounded mix of normal speaking dialogue and aggressive sound effects, but not involving the film’s climatic sequences. It's the one where the ship hits the iceberg. The software I’ve used were the free Audacity and a high-end one, not free, I’ve been using for over a decade, Steinberg’s WaveLab 4.0.
After making my syncs of the 6 mono waves to the clip from the Blu Ray and lowering the sound level of the surround channel by 3 decibels, the real work was in the center channel. In it, there were passages where the sound level was very soft, like the dialogue; and others where the sound level was very high, like the sound effects. As is, the viewer would have to turn the volume up and down every 5 seconds, especially when the film’s climatic part comes in. By applying a limiter and raising the gain, I was able to get the center channel to an acceptable level…
…however, that is my perception. This is where you all come in. I need another pair of hears to check-out my work before I work on the remaining 9 reels.
So, here it: a sample of one reel—an MKV video that contains a rip from the Blu Ray with 2 audio options that feature the following mixes:
- A 16bit/48k, 5.1 channel LPCM of the Cinema DTS sound mix
- A 24bit/48k, 5.1 channel DTS-HDMA of the Blu Ray release, for comparison
https://mega.nz/#!7sFmRKzR!1qdybyFeaqpO2...h5R8TsGLvE
Thank you, all, for your time and help.



