OK its so annoying when you download a dvd rip its always like this wide screen thing giving you a really narrow picture and the rest is black when you watch it on a regular monitor. Is there anyway to stretch it out? Make it "full screen"
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OK its so annoying when you download a dvd rip its always like this wide screen thing giving you a really narrow picture and the rest is black when you watch it on a regular monitor. Is there anyway to stretch it out? Make it "full screen"
you can change the aspect ratio in BSplayer, but then you would get an out of proportion picture
There was a nice website that showed the difference between Wide- and Fullscreen but I dont remember which site :(
All I can say is that Fullscreen doesnt show the complete picture.
examples:
http://home.iae.nl/users/starcat/b5tvm/ros.html
http://home.iae.nl/users/starcat/b5tvm/3rds.html
http://home.iae.nl/users/starcat/b5tvm/itb.html
http://home.iae.nl/users/starcat/b5tvm/acta.html
yeah as IKE said full screen doesn't show the full picture therefore it sux so many people don't realize how much gets cut off at the sides...
when VHS was around and big i remember have originals then having to rebuy VHS tapes that were in wide screen!! they were rare I cant watch a movie without wide screen anymore
I remember Harry Potter DVDhad to be re released coz the kids wouldn't like the black lines
widescreen is indeed best
ya, like adster said, i cant go w/o widescreen. think perhiphral (spelling!) vision, the full screen is basicall pan & scan which really sux, so much gets cut off. but if you cant adjust to widescreen (although i highly recommend you do, once u get used to it u'll love it) use BSPlayer like Darth said, but be warned that it will be out of proportion and it will strecthed like a mofo, everything will be "taller" than it seems.
Quote:
Originally Posted by {I}{K}{E}
Is this it? : http://www.widescreen.org/faq.shtml, http://www.widescreen.org/examples.shtml
if memory serves, u can do something about that in tmpgenc
wasnt the one I used some time ago but that is also a nice site :)Quote:
Originally Posted by Ariel_001
not necessarily. that is true of "pan & scan" full screens. but some full screen movies are "open matte" (or "full frame") versions. in the case of open matte versions, you often see more than the director intended. if you have any mgm dvds with two versions of a movie on 'um, take a look at both sides and compare... there's a good chance that the full screen side is open matte.Quote:
Originally Posted by {I}{K}{E}
example from anatomy of a murder:
widescreen (as shown in cinemas): http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film/DVDCompare/anatomy/1.jpg
open matte (usually seen on tv or vhs):
http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film/DVDCom...2.28.10-r1.jpg
usually the area covered by mattes doesn't really contain anything interesting or important, and removing 'um can make a scene look a bit too wide-open and empty. but james cameron for example has said that he actually prefers the open matte versions of his movies "aliens" and "the abyss," instead of the widescreen versions.
all that shows is that in the open matte version, u see the clock that u normally wouldnt in widescreen. but "widescreen" is natural to our senses due to periphral vision, is it not?Quote:
Originally Posted by 3RA1N1AC
yeah of course. peripheral vision... a wide cinema screen creates a more immersive experience, a good movie director/cinematographer arranges his scenes so they look best with widescreen matting, etc.Quote:
Originally Posted by cpt_azad
my point was just that people often believe that ALL full screen movies are pan & scans, with bits chopped off, but a lot of 'um are actually open mattes which show more than the matted widescreen versions do.