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GG: I can't believe some of the language I hear on television these days.
I don't understand it either.
GGL: This is the first time Ive ever see a portuguese movie.
Shh! Im trying to keep up.
I once went to a French movie dubbed in Italian with Danish subtitles. It might as well have been a silent film, but it was so well done that I enjoyed it without understanding the dialog.
I first saw “Frannie and Alexander” at an art house theater.In Swedish, with English subtitles.After awhile, you don’t notice that the actors are speaking Swedish.Then the German husband of one of the aunts starts speaking in German, and the subtitles are in German.I speak and read German, but it still made my brain hurt as I tried to shift mental gears.
And there were several movies where they hired Germans to play the role of German soldiers, who were apparently told “just say something in German”, because the subtitles had NO resemblance to what they were actually saying.In one case, the two soldiers were alternating lines in a, ummmm, “naughty” joke that would never have gotten past the censors in a German movie.
Sisyphos over 12 years ago
Are you guys reading the subtitles?
el8 over 12 years ago
sai daqui!
InTraining Premium Member over 12 years ago
Get closer to the TV…. and it will make more sense… ! ! !
whitecarabao over 12 years ago
I once went to a French movie dubbed in Italian with Danish subtitles. It might as well have been a silent film, but it was so well done that I enjoyed it without understanding the dialog.
REDROCKER51 over 12 years ago
i seen a couple of foreign films…from Canada…
Miserichord over 12 years ago
I first saw “Frannie and Alexander” at an art house theater.In Swedish, with English subtitles.After awhile, you don’t notice that the actors are speaking Swedish.Then the German husband of one of the aunts starts speaking in German, and the subtitles are in German.I speak and read German, but it still made my brain hurt as I tried to shift mental gears.
And there were several movies where they hired Germans to play the role of German soldiers, who were apparently told “just say something in German”, because the subtitles had NO resemblance to what they were actually saying.In one case, the two soldiers were alternating lines in a, ummmm, “naughty” joke that would never have gotten past the censors in a German movie.