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#1 |
Active Member
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I know there is a post dedicated to some of this, but . . .
I own a 52 inch lcd tv that was capable of full pixel picture display. Naturally i want to use the tv and get the best PQ possible, but it makes me crazy sometimes to see that "full pixel" FURTHER INCREASES the size of the black bars by over 4 total inches top and bottom. This being said i am losing over 8 sq inches of my 52 inch tv . . . am i complaining? kind of. They speak about the OAR being captured in blu ray by the directors vision of the film. Well every tv doesnt offer full pixel . . . so whats the true oar?? Is true OAR "full pixel" and what ever oar the movie is in? or is true OAR non full pixel? Last night i was guilty of the "zoom" feature to show my wife the entire tv filled up. She asked why we dont watch it like this its so much bigger and our tv was $3000 after warranty why not use it all. I tryed to explain OAR and how much you see left to right of unzoomed scenes. Anyways what do you really thing of all of this? You ever zoom in and think "wow look how big my tv just got?" |
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#2 | |
Special Member
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#3 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I know a lot of people who are annoyed by the black bars and insist on buying fullscreen movies. Most of them are women. Me, I like to see the movie the way it was intended by the director, whether it be 16:9 or 4:3, but zooming in on a widescreen presentation just to fill up the screen looks like complete butt.
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#4 |
New Member
May 2008
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I prefer widescreen... I want to see the movie the way it was intended... if you really think about it, if the movie is any good, once you're totally engulfed into the story, the lines disappear... heck, watching b&w movies from the 30's and 40's... after a while you forget it's b&w...
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#5 |
Active Member
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no one has touched on the fact that full pixel further increases the black bars. whats the actual OAR in a movie? people who own full pixel sets and watch in OAR? or people with non full pixel who watch films in OAR? Full pixel adds 2 more inches of black bar to the top and 2 more inches of black bar to the bottom with a grand total of 8 inches all together. while people viewing on a 52 inch set without full pixel get around 6 inches of black bar . . . whos getting the OAR?
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#6 | |
Active Member
May 2008
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Most of them are women? Really? What evidence do you have of this? |
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#7 |
Super Moderator
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List of Bluray Movies in 1.78:1 and 1.85:1 aspect ratio
...these will give you the "no black bars" look. ![]() |
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#8 |
Active Member
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#9 |
Active Member
May 2008
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Well here's a female vote for preferring how the film was originally intended to be viewed.
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#10 |
Blu-ray Guru
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#11 | |
Special Member
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But it burns me to this day to have had a girl tell me once about a year ago that "HDTV is just a new look to get people to buy something new". She owns a 4:3 LCD and views full screen DVD via composite video. So she is right if that is her setup. Looks like I will be getting my computer A+ certification long before I can fix that one. Suggestions? Last edited by U4K61; 05-27-2008 at 03:50 AM. |
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#12 |
Super Moderator
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I'm guessing that "FULL PIXEL" means dot for dot?
In which case it doesn't "increase" the black bars, it puts them where they're supposed to be. Black bars are probably more noticeable on an LCD, but with a CRT or plasma you should be able to calibrate them so they completely disappear when watching your movie. It should look the same shape as when you saw the movie at the cinema. |
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#13 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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ummm, evidence? Dunno how i can prove something like that. It's simple really. The only people i hear complain about black bars are women. Not trying to be sexist or insist that all women prefer fullscreen or some crap like that. Just my experience. |
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#15 | |
Super Moderator
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I don't even bother explaining anymore. I wish more studios would do what Sony did with Spider-man 3 and not even release a FULL SCREEN version. |
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#16 | |
Super Moderator
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#18 |
Active Member
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That seems to be the case. I have a Samsung 32" monitor with a feature marked "Just Scan". This is like the Sony 1:1 mode I think. I was actually surprised to find that the 16:9 mode actually reduced the overall viewable image area.
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#19 |
Special Member
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Correct me if I'm wrong but people who use zoom truly aren't movie fans or PQ fans. Doesn't zooming in the picture take the same amount of pixels and try to stretch it over a larger space which decreses the image quality and cuts off part of the movie??
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#20 | |
Special Member
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The zoom control: butcher the director's cut 101. Goes along side sharpness controls and DNR. Last edited by U4K61; 09-09-2008 at 05:25 PM. |
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