The art of subtitling ⏲️ 6 Minute English

299,619 views ・ 2023-06-08

BBC Learning English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Hello. This is 6 Minute English
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from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Neil. And I'm Beth.
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If you're deaf or hard of hearing,
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watching television would be impossible without subtitles -
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the words of dialogue added at the bottom of the screen explaining
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what the characters are saying. Subtitled captions aren't only
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for dialogue. In the most dramatic action-packed scenes of the movie,
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there might be no one speaking,
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but there are plenty of sounds - a scream, a thrilling car chase,
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and all these sounds need to be described as well.
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In this programme, we'll be meeting Karli Witkowska,
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a subtitler who works on the Stranger Things
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show to find out more, and of course
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we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well.
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But first
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I have a question for you, Neil.
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Movie subtitles are written ahead of time, but subtitling for live
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TV has to be done in the moment as the person is speaking.
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This can lead to mistakes - sometimes very funny ones,
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including a subtitle which appeared in an interview
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for the BBC Six O'clock News in 2019.
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But what did the subtitle
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say? Was it, a)
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We can't allow Spiderman to become Prime Minister. b)
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We can't allow Superman to become Prime Minister or c)
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We can't allow Batman to become Prime Minister
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I guess the subtitling mistake involved Spiderman.
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I'll reveal the answer later in the programme. Of course
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it's not just deaf audiences that subtitles help.
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The translated subtitles of foreign films are great for learning languages,
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letting you read a word and hear how it's pronounced at the same time.
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And because subtitles
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describe everything from monster squelches
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to bombs exploding,
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it's a great way to learn new adjectives.
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Here's subtitler Karli
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Witowska explaining to BBC
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Radio 4 programme Word of Mouth
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how her choice of adjective creates emotion for the viewer.
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It depends on the genre
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and depends on the shows.
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And so if you have a very upbeat sort of period piece where the music is very
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jaunty, you like you would use the word jaunty to describe the music.
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It just. It's, it's creating an idea of
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what a second is like and using a very, very descriptive word
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in order to do so. Karli bases her descriptions
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on the film's genre.
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A style of film, music or book with its own particular set of features.
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The sound effects needed for a thriller like Stranger Things -
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creaking stairs and sudden screams - are very different from the sounds used
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in historical period dramas, which are more upbeat, lighthearted and cheerful.
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This influences
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the adjective Karli chooses to describe a sound. For example,
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upbeat music might be described as jaunty - full of energy and confidence.
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Subtitles started out as an accessibility feature for deaf audiences
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and to translate foreign language films into English,
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but since the growth of online streaming services
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like Netflix, subtitling has become something of an art.
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Karli belongs to a team of subtitlers
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who try to make their descriptions as close as possible to the sounds they
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hear. Here
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she tells BBC
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Radio 4's Word of Mouth about a time
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her team found exactly the right word.
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I loved 'gobsmacked
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silence', because you were able to tell that people were like almost
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on the verge of a gasp or on the verge of like a shock
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and that was the atmosphere.
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But there wasn't actually a sound so when,
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when my colleague came up with that one,
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I definitely wanted to give him
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a virtual high five. In this scene,
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the surprise characters were about to gasp -
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take in a short, quick breath of air.
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There was no speech or sound in the scene,
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but Karli's team found the perfect adjective to describe the silence -
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'gobsmacked', which is slang for being so surprised,
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you can't speak.
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This was definitely one description that deserved a high five - lifting up
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your hand to clap hands with someone else as a greeting or to say
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'well done'. In fact, the phrase
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'gobsmacked silence' was so good
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it went viral and started being used in all kinds of situations.
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Maybe gobsmacked was how the viewers of that TV
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news programme felt - you know the mistaken subtitle you asked me
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about in your question.
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I guessed the incorrect subtitle was
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'We can't allow Spiderman to become Prime Minister'. Which was...
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the wrong answer, I'm afraid.
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In fact the interviewee
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said, 'We can't allow that man to become Prime Minister' speaking
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about Boris Johnson.
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But the misheard subtitle appeared as 'Batman'.
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05:22
OK, let's recap the vocabulary
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we learnt from this programme on subtitles.
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Starting with 'genre'.
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A style of film, music or book with its own particular set of characteristics.
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Something which is 'upbeat'
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is cheerful, hopeful and lighthearted. The
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adjective 'jaunty' means full of energy and confidence.
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If you 'gasp', you take in a short, quick breath of air
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in surprise or in pain. You can use the slang expression 'gobsmacked'
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when someone is so surprised they can't speak.
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And finally, if you give someone a 'high five',
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you hold up your hand above your head
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clapping hands with somebody else as a greeting or to say
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'well done'. Once again our six minutes are up.
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06:06
Bye for now. Bye.
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