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Thread started 10/16/02 6:36pm

IceNine

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Anamorphic Letterbox vs. Pan and Scan or Standard - UPDATED: Now with aspect ratio information

Am I the only one here who absolutely HATES movies that are not presented in letterbox format preserving the original cinematic aspect ratio?

I cannot stand it when movie companies butcher movies and destroy the cinematography by cropping the damned thing or doing pan and scan. They should NEVER destroy a movie by cutting anything from it...

Have you ever noticed how much picture is missing when you see a "standard" picture versus a cinematic aspect letterbox picture? There is so much picture missing on some of them that it destroys the feel of the scene.

For those of you who love movies and buy DVDs, please support the director's vision and do not buy butchered copies... I will ONLY buy LETTERBOXED editions if they are available and often times I will not even buy a movie if it is not released in letterbox format.

Anamorphic Letterbox movies that are enhanced for 16:9 televisions are my favorite, as I have a 65" 16:9 HDTV.

All the DVD signals are sent through a Faroudja de-interlacer, line-doubler as well.

Who is with me on this?

EDIT: Aspect ratios below

Here are examples of aspect ratios:

Standard 4:3 TV:



1.33:1



1.85:1



2.35:1

Widescreen 16:9 TV:



1.33:1



1.85:1



2.35:1
...
[This message was edited Wed Oct 16 19:41:16 PDT 2002 by IceNine]
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Reply #1 posted 10/16/02 6:42pm

rdhull

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Letterbox only if available!
"Climb in my fur."
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Reply #2 posted 10/16/02 6:43pm

IceNine

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rdhull said:

Letterbox only if available!


You are a damned good man and don't think that I haven't noticed!

biggrin

FUCK STANDARD FORMAT!
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Reply #3 posted 10/16/02 6:53pm

4LOVE

Letterbox by far.You get to see the WHOLE movie.The little details that get lost on the edges in standard format.The only letterbox that sux to me is Blade.It's a tiny bar down the middle of the screen.It's much smaller than any other letterbox i have seen.
[This message was edited Wed Oct 16 18:54:18 PDT 2002 by 4LOVE]
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Reply #4 posted 10/16/02 7:17pm

IceNine

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4LOVE said:

Letterbox by far.You get to see the WHOLE movie.The little details that get lost on the edges in standard format.The only letterbox that sux to me is Blade.It's a tiny bar down the middle of the screen.It's much smaller than any other letterbox i have seen.
[This message was edited Wed Oct 16 18:54:18 PDT 2002 by 4LOVE]



Blade had a cinematic aspect ratio of 2.35:1 which is pretty wide.

Blue Velvet is also at 2.35:1... there are a number of movies with very wide aspect ratios... this just shows how much you will lose if you crop it to 4:3 standard.

Most widescreen movies are 1.85:1, and that is the standard for anamorphic widescreen.
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Reply #5 posted 10/16/02 7:21pm

4LOVE

IceNine said:

4LOVE said:

Letterbox by far.You get to see the WHOLE movie.The little details that get lost on the edges in standard format.The only letterbox that sux to me is Blade.It's a tiny bar down the middle of the screen.It's much smaller than any other letterbox i have seen.
[This message was edited Wed Oct 16 18:54:18 PDT 2002 by 4LOVE]



Blade had a cinematic aspect ratio of 2.35:1 which is pretty wide.

Blue Velvet is also at 2.35:1... there are a number of movies with very wide aspect ratios... this just shows how much you will lose if you crop it to 4:3 standard.

Most widescreen movies are 1.85:1, and that is the standard for anamorphic widescreen.


I know there are different tv aspects US 352x240,Japan and Eurpoe 352x288.Why was the widescreen made in a different size format?Does it have to do with where it was filmed?
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Reply #6 posted 10/16/02 7:29pm

IceNine

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Good information on anamorphic enhanced DVDs:

http://www.smr-home-theat...rphic.html

More good information on aspect ratios:

http://www.flyingpictures...creen.html
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Reply #7 posted 10/16/02 7:32pm

IceNine

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Moved to initial post...
[This message was edited Wed Oct 16 19:41:35 PDT 2002 by IceNine]
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Reply #8 posted 10/16/02 8:51pm

bkw

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I'm all the way with you on this Icenine.

I only buy movies that are in their correct aspect ratio as the director intended. I hate cropped films, you miss so much picture.

Anormorhic letterbox for me. biggrin
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Reply #9 posted 10/16/02 8:53pm

2the9s

Whichever one it is that makes the Ya-Ya Sisterhood look shapely.
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Reply #10 posted 10/17/02 5:07am

IceNine

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These animated GIFs show the lost information on Standard/Pan and Scan DVDs versus Letterbox:


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Reply #11 posted 10/17/02 6:14am

AzureStar

I vould choose zee letterbox. smile
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Reply #12 posted 10/17/02 6:15am

PlastikLuvAffa
ir

headbang letterbox, baby. headbang
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Reply #13 posted 10/17/02 7:07am

applekisses

I'm pushing the envelope into the letterbox! smile
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Reply #14 posted 10/17/02 7:49am

IceNine

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So... does anyone on here actually like Pan and Scan/Standard aspect movies?
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Reply #15 posted 10/17/02 10:04am

vgallo6

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Letterbox all the way!
Peace and Love!
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Reply #16 posted 10/17/02 3:35pm

mcmeekle

IceNine said:

So... does anyone on here actually like Pan and Scan/Standard aspect movies?


My favourite Pan and Scan moment was when they panned left-to-right across the subtitle!
(I think it was a TV showing of Return of the Jedi.)


I only wish they had added a `bouncing ball` across the top of the words...
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Reply #17 posted 10/17/02 4:02pm

BorisFishpaw

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Letterbox everytime!

I work in music retail, and it's depressing how many
stupid people there are out there who don't like
widescreen because of the black bars top & bottom of
the screen, and to cap it all, they often think that
those black bars mean that some of the picture's
missing!

I've lost count of the times I've tried to explain
screen ratios to customers who just don't get it,
and prefer buying pan & scan so they will get the
'full picture' on their TV's.

I got yer pan & scan Harry Potter right here!



(And yes, I prefer subtitles to dubbing as well.)
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Reply #18 posted 10/17/02 5:01pm

IceNine

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BorisFishpaw said:

Letterbox everytime!

I work in music retail, and it's depressing how many
stupid people there are out there who don't like
widescreen because of the black bars top & bottom of
the screen, and to cap it all, they often think that
those black bars mean that some of the picture's
missing!

I've lost count of the times I've tried to explain
screen ratios to customers who just don't get it,
and prefer buying pan & scan so they will get the
'full picture' on their TV's.

I got yer pan & scan Harry Potter right here!



(And yes, I prefer subtitles to dubbing as well.)


You mentioned Harry Potter... what kind of purchasing trend have you noticed on that disc, since they put out two different versions?

What percentage would you say buys widescreen and what percentage buys pan and scan?
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Reply #19 posted 10/17/02 5:15pm

BorisFishpaw

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With popular mainstream films like Harry Potter
it tends to be about 80% pan & scan, 20% widescreen.
Sad but true.

The percentages head in a much more healthy direction
the closer you get to 'classic' or more 'grown up' films.
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Reply #20 posted 10/17/02 5:16pm

ian

IceNine, I share your pain.
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Reply #21 posted 10/17/02 5:32pm

IceNine

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BorisFishpaw said:

With popular mainstream films like Harry Potter
it tends to be about 80% pan & scan, 20% widescreen.
Sad but true.

The percentages head in a much more healthy direction
the closer you get to 'classic' or more 'grown up' films.


That is a VERY sad and scary thing, as the studios might decide that the demographics of sales dictate that they butcher all films...

I worry about that.
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Reply #22 posted 10/17/02 5:33pm

IceNine

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ian said:

IceNine, I share your pain.


It is painful to see a movie butchered with Pan and Scan isn't it?
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Reply #23 posted 10/17/02 5:41pm

BorisFishpaw

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IceNine said:

BorisFishpaw said:

With popular mainstream films like Harry Potter
it tends to be about 80% pan & scan, 20% widescreen.
Sad but true.

The percentages head in a much more healthy direction
the closer you get to 'classic' or more 'grown up' films.


That is a VERY sad and scary thing, as the studios might decide that the demographics of sales dictate that they butcher all films...

I worry about that.



So do I.
That's exactly why they practically stopped making widescreen video.
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Reply #24 posted 10/17/02 5:47pm

IceNine

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BorisFishpaw said:

IceNine said:

BorisFishpaw said:

With popular mainstream films like Harry Potter
it tends to be about 80% pan & scan, 20% widescreen.
Sad but true.

The percentages head in a much more healthy direction
the closer you get to 'classic' or more 'grown up' films.


That is a VERY sad and scary thing, as the studios might decide that the demographics of sales dictate that they butcher all films...

I worry about that.



So do I.
That's exactly why they practically stopped making widescreen video.


I hope that HDTV and 16:9 widescreen televisions really catch on... that will help keep movies in their cinematic aspect ratios.

I wish that there was a way to really educate the public on this issue... or that directors would REFUSE to allow their movies to be butchered.
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Reply #25 posted 10/17/02 5:56pm

BorisFishpaw

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IceNine said:

BorisFishpaw said:

IceNine said:

BorisFishpaw said:

With popular mainstream films like Harry Potter
it tends to be about 80% pan & scan, 20% widescreen.
Sad but true.

The percentages head in a much more healthy direction
the closer you get to 'classic' or more 'grown up' films.


That is a VERY sad and scary thing, as the studios might decide that the demographics of sales dictate that they butcher all films...

I worry about that.



So do I.
That's exactly why they practically stopped making widescreen video.


I hope that HDTV and 16:9 widescreen televisions really catch on... that will help keep movies in their cinematic aspect ratios.

I wish that there was a way to really educate the public on this issue... or that directors would REFUSE to allow their movies to be butchered.


I second that!
If the directors only allowed the films to be released in thier original format ratio, people would soon get used to it, and hopefully would never go back.
(but I fear that monkeys may fly out of my butt first)
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Reply #26 posted 10/17/02 7:06pm

LaVisHh

I only buy movies that are letterbox...except mad I was sooo excited when Grease came out (so WHAT? LOL)... I ran to target and bought it (it was labeled Full Screen)...like a deer in headlights, I didn't THINK, bought it, placed it in my DVD player... rolleyes

The rest is history... neutral
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Reply #27 posted 10/18/02 12:53am

CalhounSq

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IceNine said:

Am I the only one here who absolutely HATES movies that are not presented in letterbox format preserving the original cinematic aspect ratio?


You are SO not alone here! Pan & Scan absolutely BLOWS, it's incredibly distracting & detectable. And there's NO excuse for Standard Format in 2002. Letterbox or nothing (which is why I still don't own PR on DVD). sad

Another thing: WHY is the Goodfellas DVD, one of the best films of all time, double sided??? i.e., you have to turn the bitch over to see the second half of the movie... mad WTF is wrong w/ the folks who put out DVD's??? disbelief
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Reply #28 posted 10/18/02 7:02am

IceNine

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CalhounSq said:

IceNine said:

Am I the only one here who absolutely HATES movies that are not presented in letterbox format preserving the original cinematic aspect ratio?


You are SO not alone here! Pan & Scan absolutely BLOWS, it's incredibly distracting & detectable. And there's NO excuse for Standard Format in 2002. Letterbox or nothing (which is why I still don't own PR on DVD). sad

Another thing: WHY is the Goodfellas DVD, one of the best films of all time, double sided??? i.e., you have to turn the bitch over to see the second half of the movie... mad WTF is wrong w/ the folks who put out DVD's??? disbelief


I am with you on the "flipper" thing... that really annoys me. They might get it together and make a dual-layer edition with the film on one side of a disc. They finally released "Amadeus" in a non-flipper edition a few weeks ago, so maybe they will get it together on some other great movies.

AND

I am glad to see that everyone on here that has responded sees how horrible pan and scan and standard format are... there might be hope for the letterbox format yet!

biggrin
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Reply #29 posted 10/18/02 10:45am

IceNine

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LaVisHh said:

I only buy movies that are letterbox...except mad I was sooo excited when Grease came out (so WHAT? LOL)... I ran to target and bought it (it was labeled Full Screen)...like a deer in headlights, I didn't THINK, bought it, placed it in my DVD player... rolleyes

The rest is history... neutral



Do you have a widescreen, 16:9 television?

I REALLY hate watching standard format movies on my 16:9 screen... damn, it sucks.
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