The integration of sound effects and music plays a central role in shaping the audience's emotional engagement and narrative comprehension in film. The 'drama' genre in film is primarily concerned with depicting human emotions and human narrative-based storytelling. Ten scenes were analysed, with participants in three groups exposed to six combinations of audio and visual stimuli. Participants reported salient sounds and their interpretations, focusing on context and emotional responses. One hypothesis is that effective sound design blurs the line between music and sound effects; another is that music conveys more emotion while sound effects enhance immersion. The results showed that 63\% of participants found the score more relevant to the context. The evaluation highlights that music alone emphasizes certain emotions more, while sound effects alone create moderate variability between emotion and sound identification.