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Polish dubbing in movies; why is it so that on polish television all the films are dubbed?


plk123 8 | 4,142
30 Jan 2008 #31
Jabwaw

TV YES BUT NOT IN THE MOVIES.. SUBTITLES THEN MOST OF THE TIME...

I CAN'T STAND THE COUPLE MALE DRONES DOING ALL THE CHARACTERS EITHER.. WTF? XXI, TIME TO GIT WITH IT.
hu_man 6 | 131
30 Jan 2008 #32
No one is talking about 20 years ago. Every post you make is about 20 years ago. I really don't know if your just being sarcastic or being a complete *******.

hahahahaha, that's funny but true i was talking about now.
OP Jabwaw 8 | 48
31 Jan 2008 #33
TV YES BUT NOT IN THE MOVIES.. SUBTITLES THEN MOST OF THE TIME...

Well dear, I can understand that in TV its normal but in movies there are most of the time subtitles are off :( even if theres an option of changing it but it appears tat its off :) I ve tried cefra plus, n tv, strefa, neo strad but most of the time its like this:) anyway i think i will get use to it after some time :) but dont know when hehehhe
Michal - | 1,865
31 Jan 2008 #34
I can not answer for Polish television today as I never watch that sort of rubbish but I can tell you about twenty five years ago.
z_darius 14 | 3,965
31 Jan 2008 #35
I can not answer for Polish television today as I never watch that sort of rubbish

I tried to lool for logic in that sentence, but I can't find it.
Michal - | 1,865
31 Jan 2008 #36
I tried to lool for logic in that sentence

I must admit that sometimes I try to lool for logic in the Poles and can not find it either.
jkn005 1 | 127
31 Jan 2008 #37
I can not answer for Polish television today as I never watch that sort of rubbish but I can tell you about twenty five years ago.

Perhaps you can start a thread titled "Poland, how it was 25 years ago" then just post to yourself.
Michal - | 1,865
31 Jan 2008 #38
I am not in a position to talk about Poland today. Am I expected to return there on a weekly basis to report on the comings and goings?
jkn005 1 | 127
31 Jan 2008 #39
No your not, however reading many threads related to today's events you normally show your prejudice based on events from 25 years ago. That does not relate to today or have much relevance. I'm sure I'm not the first to point this out to you. Many of your comments are the equivalent of something like, British have a very low level of computer literacy because 25 years ago no one used them. You post a lot of hatred towards Polish based on the way it was, not the way it is.
Paulina 16 | 4,370
31 Jan 2008 #40
There are two reasons why we prefer the narrator rather than Polish subtitles:
1. we got used to it ;)
2. the structure of the Polish language (for Poles reading subtitles is more difficult) It's explained in this article:
forum.gazeta.pl/forum/72,2.html?f=902&w=74259707&a=74259707
polishcanuck 7 | 462
31 Jan 2008 #41
Perhaps you can start a thread titled "Poland, how it was 25 years ago" then just post to yourself.

I support this idea. It is quite clear that he deeply misses poland and this separation is troubling his mind. I can just picture him sitting in his flat in the UK on a rainy oops... i mean usual ... day staring eastwards out the window, tears running down his face, saying "moja ojczyzna, o jak ja teskne za toba." This painting depicts michal's troubled state:

Upadek Polski

Maybe he is shy, you should create the thread in his behalf.

Going back to the topic, Polish dubbing in movies = annoying. I can't watch any of these dubbed movies.
isthatu 3 | 1,164
31 Jan 2008 #42
I remember watching "Hair". The guy was so out of sync with the movie that the dialogs made no sense whatsoever, and I couldn't hear the original sound track.

Oh,like wow man,was watching this last night ,an,that whole outa sink lecotor,so not groovy man. How did the lectors handle the songs? " Sodomy...." " Coloured Spade" etc ...far out.
SeanBM 35 | 5,806
28 Dec 2008 #43
I would like to punch mr. lektor in the nose.
Well not any more but when I had a television 6 years ago and all I could hear was the first and last word of every sentence, it drove me bonkers.

I always wondered why they did not have the lektor in one speaker and the real dialogue in the other, that way YOU could choose.

Goodness, when there was a romantic scene and the mono tone voice of pan lektor did both dialogues it became farcical and boring i.e. not romantic.

Just thought I would gove a quick rant :)
dcchris 8 | 432
28 Dec 2008 #44
yep that guy keeps me from watching tv. i guess he is a blessing in disguise.
Polonius3 994 | 12,367
23 Jun 2010 #45
Thread attached on merging:
How pricey is dubbing itno Polish?

The widespread use of Polish voice-overs when foreign films are screened on Polish TV and the use of subtitles in the cinema suggest that dubbign is a costly operation. Anyone know hwomuch more it costs than vocie-oiver or ubtitles?

Some of the Polish TV adverts (for soap powders, washing-up liquids, etc.) I have seen are poorly dubbed becasue the lip movements do not reflect the Polish text. I understand all dubbing is not the same. Good (and presumably more expensive) dubbing selects words of the length and mouth movement similar to the original, creating the illusion of normal speech.
Olaf 6 | 955
25 Jun 2010 #46
are there any other persons like me who hate such thing?

it pi***s me off every time man. I actually threw away my tv set as apart from movies there was nothing on the telly. And the movies were dubbed...
David_18 66 | 969
25 Jun 2010 #47
Subtitles for the win!!!!!!
MareGaea 29 | 2,751
25 Jun 2010 #48
Agreed. Subtitles are probably the best way to learn a foreign language.

>^..^<

M-G (haec hactenus)
roca 7 | 43
7 Nov 2011 #49
Merged: Do you hate the polish lector in the films?

You know it guys, that emotionless voice interfering while watching a film.

Some polish people say they like it because they can get the feeling of the original language in the film while is being translated to polish by the lector. Others say that they have grown up with it so it is quite normal. Usually foreingers say it is quite annoying, disturbing and interrupting. I am agree with them, it shows usually laziness and lack of money (as always in Poland) not to have a film properly translated. If it is not translated, it could have subtitles, but it seems that the subtitles will create an extra effort on the polish people because they will be forced to 'read' , so they stick again to their beloved lector and reject to have subtitles.

so, Do you hate it or like it?
rozumiemnic 8 | 3,862
7 Nov 2011 #50
Hate it. You cannot hear the original voices properly, and I cannot understand the translation. So it's two lots of useless dialogue.
However, once or twice I have enjoyed watching a movie like this together with someone who cannot speak English. So it has its points. It's the same voice, flat and characterless for all the voices. Cheap cheap cheap.
Jimmu 2 | 156
7 Nov 2011 #51
I HATE it!
With subtitles I might learn something, but lektor obfuscates the English to the point that I have no clue what's being said. And the English peeks through just often enough to distract me from trying to figure out the Polish. But I guess if my Polish was good and my English wasn't I might like it. :-<

I did see a funny kabaret skit about lektor for a scene with lots of foul language. Everything came out as "terra ferra"(sp?)
pip 10 | 1,659
7 Nov 2011 #52
despise it. I don't watch t.v. because of this. however, if you have polsat cyfrowy you can take the lektor off on certain channels. I also despise childrens cartoons (i have kids) --the voices are adults pretending to be kids- makes me insane. cartoons in english are using actual children's voices.
Richfilth 6 | 415
7 Nov 2011 #53
"hey-honey-I'm-home" droned the husband, closing the front door.

"hello-sweetie-how-was-work" droned the wife in the exact same tired voice.

"daddy-look-at-the-picture-I-drew-of-us" droned the five-year-old daughter, eerily imitating the voice of a bored 45-year-old accountant.

"SNOORRRRRE" droned the audience, falling asleep.
SeanBM 35 | 5,806
7 Nov 2011 #54
Do you hate it or like it?

If I ever meet him, I'll kill him.

I have also noticed that countries that speak foriegn languages the best (like Norway and the Netherlands) have subtitles not a lektor.
A compromise would be to have him only in the left speaker, then you could turn the fecker off.
FUZZYWICKETS 8 | 1,879
7 Nov 2011 #55
it's absolutely hideous. i was astounded when i first saw that in poland.
Richfilth 6 | 415
7 Nov 2011 #56
A compromise would be to have him only in the left speaker

Of course he's a left speaker, he's a throwback to Communism
SeanBM 35 | 5,806
7 Nov 2011 #57
Actually that's a point. I heard for example that in the Polish film "Sex Mission" (great film:) that when they were running away, they said "Lets go West!" and the English translation was "Lets go East!".

This is hearsay and I am not sure of the exact details but you might have been right during communism.
mafketis 37 | 10,897
7 Nov 2011 #58
I can't stand it if the language of the original is English for all the reasons people here mention (blocks out original, sounds dumb, sounds .... tacky (tandetnie) )

I don't much mind it if the language of the original isn't English. I'm not crazy about it, but I can watch a movie in French or German or whatever with a lektor.

Personally, I don't mind dubbing (if you want audio translation) but it's very un-PC to admit that.

Polish style voice overs are the worst of both worlds, you lose the original (at least the way it was meant to be heard) _and_ you have the bad, abbreviated translations associated with subtitles.
peter_olsztyn 6 | 1,098
7 Nov 2011 #59
Do you hate it or like it?

We love it ;) Check Kill Bill with Polish lector for example. Masterpiece :)

The worst scenario is German way of dubbing. The best genuine soundtrack with subtitles.
Wroclaw Boy
7 Nov 2011 #60
yeah cant quite imagine the dead nigga storage scene from Pulp Fiction coming accross to well with that lektor.


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