this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2026
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For example, whenever I watch an American movie with Japanese subtitles: the translation kind of sucks since there are words translated literally word by word making zero sense or lack of taking account of visual context from a scene. Depends on who translated the dialog, it could be that translators didn't watch the movie or understand the context in specific scenes.

I recall watching Clear & Present Danger (Harrison Ford) with JP sub, there was a piece of dialog where the commander of a special forces unit gave the orders on planting explosives in which he ordered them to "cook it" basically implying on detonating the trigger but the subtitles translated this as 料理しろ which is incorrect when you account the scene's context.

Whether you speak German, French, Spanish or etc. are the translated subtitles crap when it comes to movies where colloquialisms (slang), jokes (humor) or wordplay (puns) are thrown into the mix while listening to the original English dub? It's because subtitles only convey a message but can miss nuances from spoken dialog via the source language.

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[–] LtDan@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (6 children)

Like what I wrote in the thread: I was watching a Harrison Ford movie with Japanese subtitles and they translated “cook it” (as in “press the detonator”) said by a military commander during a certain scene leading up to an action sequence (special forces were about to raid a cartel compound in Colombia) literally as 料理しろ which literally means “Let’s cook” (like in cooking food at a kitchen) which sounds completely stupid when you take visual context into account. Subtitles can suck, even in Finnish for example since it's a different language from English.

[–] HuudaHarkiten@piefed.social 1 points 1 day ago (5 children)

I don't mind too much those translation errors that come from things like slang or figure of speech types of things, like "cook it" etc. But when theres a technical word that you could easily look up, its insane to me that the translator decides to just guess what it might be.

My favorite silly translation "error" was when the "The Song Remains The Same" Led Zeppelin film was translated to "Laulu Jää Pystyyn" - "the song stays standing up." Like why would you even translate that? Its literally a song name, just keep it in the original English. But even further, why would you translate it that way? Why not use "laulu pysyy samana" which would be a direct translation of the song title. I would guess that who ever translated it was old and unfamiliar with Led Zeppelin songs, or something like that. But at least it gave us something to laugh at. And a Finnish band Eppu Normaali did release their own concert film with the title "Laulu Jää Pystyyn." So that was something.

[–] darklamer@feddit.org 1 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

But when theres a technical word that you could easily look up, its insane to me that the translator decides to just guess what it might be.

A friend of mine used to translate subtitles as a part time job while being a student and I can assure you that he wasn't paid anywhere close enough to waste any time at all on looking up anything he didn't readily know.

[–] HuudaHarkiten@piefed.social 1 points 6 hours ago

Yeah, bad pay leads to shitty work and workers who don't care about how shitty their work is. How did that old Soviet joke go, "they pretend to pay, we pretend to work." Something like that.

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