I'm watching First Man and the sound is so fuzzy that the dialogue is hard to distinguish.
Is that just this DVD or was the film like that?
I suspect it's the way it was made.
I noticed in recent years that dialogue in movies is often drowned out by the incidental music or other elements of the soundtrack.
At first, I put it down to aging; But if I watch a film made longer ago, I don't have the same issue, so it's not my old ears that are to blame.
Now, I almost never see movies at a cinema - only on TV. So I am wondering if moviemakers are putting together films with dialogue that's easy to hear in a theatre, with multi-track surround sound speakers; But when the soundtracks are merged to produce a TV broadcast and/or home use DVD, the merging technique might try to equalise the sound level from each track, leading to dialogue being buried under the incidental noise.
Movies made before cinema sound systems became so advanced would therefore not be expected to suffer from this problem.
Perhaps I need to leave the house to test this hypothesis. But that would require interaction with strangers, so it's not likely to happen.