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Post by thoughouthyut on Oct 10, 2021 22:28:56 GMT
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Post by Fox in the Snow on Oct 11, 2021 2:52:24 GMT
Can't think of any specific example. Sounds like something you'd see in a Scorsese film (probably Goodfellas, Casino or Wolf of Wall Street, involved narratives that take place over a long time period, with lots of voiceover and a lot of characters). Not sure if they specifically use a "record scratch" sound effect though.
EDIT: Just saw you got more or less the same answer on Film General
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Post by Ass_E9 on Oct 11, 2021 16:13:03 GMT
Without the freeze-frame, a record scratch effect punctuates a scene in Don't Be a Menace to South Central... in which a conversation comes to an sudden, uncomfortable halt. Perhaps it happens more in that sense. Usually, a record scratch just reminds me of the Pulp Fiction trailer in which it is placed right before the "uncomfortable silences" bit.
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Post by Stammerhead on Oct 14, 2021 8:37:28 GMT
The freeze frame has been use many times but I don’t recall seeing it combined with a record scratch.
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