If people are going to be forced to wear special glasses, wouldn't it be better to show captions in a way that you need special glasses to see, rather than to hide? If I had to wear special glasses to see movies, I'd be much less likely to go see movies.
The volume of movie theaters is not because they think people can't hear adequately if it were lower. It's for psychological/experiential reasons. The volume would not be different if there were closed captioning.
Given the trend of everyone putting text on every social media video and people leaving captions on streaming services all the time, perhaps it will just be a standard in another decade or two.
If people are going to be forced to wear special glasses, wouldn't it be better to show captions in a way that you need special glasses to see, rather than to hide? If I had to wear special glasses to see movies, I'd be much less likely to go see movies.
Ha yeah, I think the OP idea is influenced by the solution of using polarization.
But maybe you could do something funky with parallax instead and have subtitle-seating and non-subtitle-seating, then nobody needs the glasses!
What about the people who have to plug their ears because the sound volume is too high?
What about them? That seems like a different topic. I assume they're less likely to go see movies as well, though.
Movie theaters would be able to lower the sound volume if they show closed captions.
The volume of movie theaters is not because they think people can't hear adequately if it were lower. It's for psychological/experiential reasons. The volume would not be different if there were closed captioning.
Given the trend of everyone putting text on every social media video and people leaving captions on streaming services all the time, perhaps it will just be a standard in another decade or two.
https://raleighmag.com/2023/09/subtitles-craze/
Netflix is already adapting to this trend.
https://about.netflix.com/en/news/introducing-a-new-way-to-e...