This DTS "issue" is not the only thing about the Region 2 version of The Phantom Of The Opera.
Having just watched it for the second time (first was in my car) on my home system that i have spent a fair bit of money perfecting the sound setup, i must say, I feel betrayed.
Now, firstly, I bought the disc from a tesco supermarket and couldn't wait to watch it in the car... unfortunately the disc would not play... i mean it wouldn't even enter the initial copyright warning screen, it just spun and spun in the player trying to read it. well, eventually it DID read it, but failed completely when it arrived at the layer change of the DVD.
Fortunately for me, i have DTS in the car so didn't even notice the issue mentioned above as I had deliberately selected DTS manually... I exchanged the DVD at a different tesco supermarket and the sales girl there pointed out the DTS issue, and it took me a while to convince her that it was the DISC fault that I wanted it exchanged for, and eventually got another disc, but STILL it struggled to play.
Nevertheless, whilst watching it I DID however notice that there were a few 500ms blank spots in the audio throughout the film... and ALSO during some deep bass notes that the sound seemed to be a bit "Jerky".
It's hard to describe it, but it was like a continuos double-bass note was almost synthesised and the sample loop was noticeable.
I thought nothing of it and put it down to the Car system.
HOWEVER after watching Phantom at home in DTS 6.1 with a Pro THX PM3 JBL Subwoofer, these jerky bass notes are actually inherent in the film soundtrack! You can notice it considerably during the open minute of "Wishing you were somehow here again"... turn the bass right up, and the other speakers down, and you'll hear.
I tried the DD5.1 track, and the same fault is there.... AS ARE THE 500ms Drop-outs... (in the last few worRAB of "Learn to be lonely" in the end credits)
NOW... on listening to the DD2.0 track... ALL BECOMES CLEAR! The PITCH of the music is slightly HIGHER than the 5.1 soundtracks... this is because when transferring from 24 frames per second to 25 frames per second, the whole film is simply sped up. Although you can't simply speed up a Digital track, a bit of processing has to occur, this unfortunately has meant that the sound quality on the 5.1 tracks of Phantom have been compromised!!!! Mainly due to cheap transerring techniques!
I am sick and tired of these cheap DVRAB that emerge on the market and Region 2 seems to be the most suffering. I can't see why we being in this country have to suffer from inferior quality DVD playback. And it brings up the whole issue about why players actually DO allow you to play other regions.
Even though NTSC is slightly inferior to PAL in some respects, it's about time the quality of films on DVD in the UK improved.
I have ordered the Region 3 version of the DVD as it, i've been informed, is free of drop-outs and contains a much better 96kHz/24 Bit DTS soundtrack.