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#1 |
Junior Member
Feb 2014
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Hi, sorry I'm a newbie at this, hope it's not confusing.
If I wanted to watch a 2:35 aspect film (according to IMDB) on blu-ray with my laptop, how do I do so to preserve the original aspect ratio? Do I just set the aspect settings in VLC to 2:35? Thanks. Edit: some screenshots, I'm not sure which looks right. at the default 16:9 ![]() set to 2.35:1 ![]() Last edited by grey77; 03-26-2014 at 07:15 PM. |
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#2 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Unlike DVDs, Blu-ray uses square pixels, so you don't need to set anything differently. All Blu-rays are encoded at 16:9 and use black bars to fill any unused space. So no matter what the aspect ratio of the film is, the technical aspect ratio of the video on the disc is 16:9, and that's where you should leave your settings.
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#3 | |||
Junior Member
Feb 2014
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#4 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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When watching on your laptop leave all the settings (Crop, Aspect Ratio and Zoom) to Default. There shouldn't be any reason to change them. Let VLC work out how to play them. Django Unchained is 2.39:1 and not 2.35:1.
The 2nd image is incorrect, you've squashed it! That 2nd quote sounds like nonsense, BD players can play back anamorphic DVDs perfectly fine. Last edited by chip75; 04-01-2014 at 10:00 PM. |
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#5 | |
Junior Member
Feb 2014
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The image appear squashed because we are used to viewing 2.35:1 picture on 16:9 TV screens. I know some purists prefer the former 'squashed' and that's what I'm trying to understand. 2.35:1 example: ![]() Another example (Dark Skies) in 16:9 ![]() Forced to 2:35:1 ![]() 16:9 ![]() 2:35:1 ![]() |
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#6 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Aspect Ratios are image ratios and don't include the letterboxing. Hopefully you can see why you're getting confused with the examples below. The first 3 are 1920x1080 captures. Image 4 has been expanded to a 4:3 with a 2.35:1 image inside that ratio. The pixel dimensions in the image is the size of the image not including the letterboxing. As you can see if you squash the image like you've done, the visible image changes to a 3.17:1 aspect ratio. The squashed images also resemble what a non-anamorphic DVD would look like if played on a 16:9 display. big.jpg Note: The bottom image is from your 1600x900 screen capture. The Close Encounters of the Third Kind shot should read 1920x816 not 1928x816. Last edited by chip75; 04-02-2014 at 06:47 PM. |
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#7 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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If you take notice of the 2 identical images below, at first glance the 4:3 Display looks squashed compared to the 16:9 (or the 16:9 looks stretched) Display but they're identical.
Untitled-1.jpg Below gives examples of a 2.35:1 image on a 4:3 Display and a Squashed 2.35:1 image on a 16:9 Display. Untitled-2.jpg Last edited by chip75; 04-02-2014 at 07:31 PM. |
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#8 |
Junior Member
Feb 2014
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Hi chip,
thanks for your posts, i understand clearer now. i had thought the black bars were part of the image. cos if i took a screenshot of a film set to 2:35:1 first with the software player it will show 1920x816 ~2:35, that is with black bars included. there is a small group i came across who prefered the squashed image but it's on the p2p scene. according to them the black bars perserve the original aspect ratio of the film so they wont crop it out of blu-ray encodes. |
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#9 | |||
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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It's in 2:40:1. YouTube's player adds the black bars, if you download it and play it back with VLC player its dimensions will be 1920x800. The black-bars are generated by the player, unlike: The black-bars are encoded into the video itself (it's 1920x1080). When both of these titles hit Blu-ray they'll have the black-bars as part of the image but they should be discarded when working out the aspect ratio. |
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aspect ratio |
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