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- but the subtitles are way off -

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![Huh [easter_huh]](http://www.dsboards.com/SMF/Smileys/classic/easter_huh.gif)
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Actually, that's only partly true because it's the subtitles for the Amazon version of the film that are way off there. Considering how the Blu-ray/DVD and VHS versions of the film use the same file respectively for the subtitles and closed captioning but they can display differently depending on what TV/video player one is using, meaning different screen placements and durations on screen, just for the fun of it the other day I decided to compare the Blu-ray's subtitles with Amazon's subtitles. I'd assumed they both used the same subtitles file so I wasn't expecting to see any differences. Well, my comparison proved once again that one should never assume. I only compared up to the point we currently are in this topic, and the vast majority of differences were simply that some lines of dialogue appeared on one line in one version while in the other they appeared on two - no biggie and nothing worth getting into in detail. But when I reached the end of Strack's dream voiceover I was quite surprised to see that only the Amazon subtitles were way off with the last line, while the Blu-ray subtitles were correct:

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All this time I've been using the Amazon version for the subtitles because, as I said, I'd assumed they were the same as the Blu-ray, plus I have a downloaded copy of that version of the film on my PC, whereas I didn't have a copy of the Blu-ray version with subtitles until the other day when I decided to do the comparison. Now I'm really curious to see what other similar differences there might be, and I'll be checking for that as the slideshow progresses through this fourth run...
![NoDS Angelique [nods]](http://www.dsboards.com/SMF/Smileys/classic/index.jpg)