Can a single background score bring a living room to life?
Ask anyone who watched Kingdom this weekend.
Not in theatres. At home. On a setup that didn’t just play the BGM it amplified it. Multiplied it. Let it breathe.
Because Kingdom is more than a film. It’s a comeback. A redemption arc. A spectacle scored by Anirudh Ravichander, who turned every transition, reveal, and face-off into something visceral.
The BGM wasn’t in the background anymore. It was the pulse.
Not all TVs are built to carry a storm

Let’s be real.
Most TVs flatten big moments. The chase scene sounds like a scooter in a tunnel. Dialogue competes with explosions. Bass either disappears or bulldozes everything.
So when people say “watch Kingdom on a good setup,” what they mean is this: don’t let cheap audio kill peak performance.
Here’s what makes the difference.
This isn’t sound. This is architecture
The 144Hz OLED TV is not just a screen, it’s a stage.
- Sound by Harman Kardon (50W): You feel the lows in your gut and the highs in your spine. Every whisper, drumbeat, and crescendo lands clean and full.
- Dolby Atmos: Audio isn’t just coming at you. It’s around you. Over you. Behind you. Anirudh’s strings feel like they’re bouncing off your walls.
- Pixel-perfect visuals (Dolby Vision IQ + HDR10+): Because let’s not forget BGM hits harder when synced with lighting that adapts to your room’s ambience.
And all this wrapped in a sleek OLED panel with 144Hz refresh so even when the camera spins, the picture doesn’t smear.
Why is this TV blowing up during Kingdom’s release?

Because it understands Indian viewing behavior.
We don’t just “watch” movies. We relive them.
- That moment when Vijay’s character steps into frame for the first time you rewind it.
- That slow-mo walk during the interval you pause it. Replay it. Again.
- That BGM drops before the twist when you crank the volume.
This TV doesn’t just keep up with the emotion. It elevates it.
Bigger sound isn’t about louder volume. It’s about precision
Here’s what most buyers get wrong: they look for decibels, not definition.
But cinematic audio isn’t about noise. It’s about placement.
- Can you hear the glass crackle on the floor before the explosion?
- Can you feel the silence before the interval BGM hits?
- Can you separate the flute in the mix from the ambient tension?
With the OLED, you can. Because good sound isn’t a luxury it’s the difference between watching and feeling.
But what about daily TV? Will I use all these features?

Yes. Because you don’t just buy a TV for one blockbuster.
- 144Hz refresh means IPL looks smoother.
- Google TV interface means you don’t need a Fire Stick or extra dongle.
- Voice control and solar remote mean you don’t have to chase the remote under the sofa anymore.
And yes, YouTube music videos sound richer too. Even when you’re streaming a lo-fi remix of Kingdom’s title theme at 2 a.m.
Final thought? Don’t let Kingdom’s BGM live only in reels
Watch it as it was meant to be heard.
Because when you pair a cinematic score with a cinematic setup, you don’t just “watch” a movie. You remember it.
And in a world full of forgettable content, that’s worth investing in. Haier 144Hz OLED TV because some stories deserve more than standard speakers.