Turning virtually any high powered device on meant it would have to spin up, power up, cycle, etc. Usually with satisfying whirring, humming, clicking. Nowadays everything boot's up and you might get a chime.
The background noise was pretty high though. Those old circuits and tubes would hum. There was a lot of interference between them, so stereos would click, pop and hum when operating other devices nearby. Things like that.
Back in the early DVD days the studios would hand out DVD "screener" copies to film critics and magazines for reviews. They were often ripped and passed around when films were still in theatres. Often they had a watermark or subtitles in a different language but were otherwise top quality.
There's a lot of noise but it's still "clean". Like the cables at the top, the rust, the splashing, the guys in the back on the left. It's the kind of shit AI models do to fake being real.
It's worse than that. Often things pick up significantly because that could be where the lines get drawn. The end of WWI was really bad right after they signed ths treaty but before hostilities ended.
Desperado?
Was pretty popular when it came out but I haven't heard a peep about it since. The first movie "El Mariachi" was low budget af