This has been bugging me for some time; when DVD when to wide screen it was 16x9 and that was it.However now we have Blu-Ray saying 1080p 1920x1080 with a 2.39:1 aspect ratio...Why in the world can't all Blu-Rays be full 16x9 like they advertise and quit shrinking the picture to half the size of your screen?You would figure with the highest quality media you would get the largest picture possible, not a squeezed one. Does anyone understand why there is such a large flux in ratio from movie to movie?
5/5/2010 10:53:54 PM
wowhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anamorphic_widescreen#Filmcameras/films/lenses that they use for actual movies aren't 16x9. Directors have various artistic/whatever reasons for choosing a format "wider" than wide-screen.When you see a movie where the screen is "filled up" that typically means that you're see LESS movie than what people saw in the cinema. They actually chop off/zoom in portions of the image to make it fit in to the puny 16:9 format.If you want to fill up the screen, just use one of yoru TV's various zoom options.
5/5/2010 11:02:04 PM
well that really blows, thanks for the info.I knew it had to do with theater to TV transition and I know about Anamorphic widescreen, but wasn't sure how this played into aspect chosen for each film.Also why wasn't this an issue for DVD and Theater? Did they just cut off part of the picture in all DVD 16x9 releases?[Edited on May 5, 2010 at 11:05 PM. Reason : .]
5/5/2010 11:04:37 PM
5/5/2010 11:20:56 PM
those bastards!so basically Blu-Ray is using a more "pure" form of aspect ratio than DVD resulting in a smaller picture on screen.
5/5/2010 11:25:01 PM
I think "pure form" is the wrong terminology ... but I think studios are keeping themselves more concerned with maintaining the original aspect ratio and letting the viewer use their TV to perform transformations if they want it to fill the whole screen (ie, using the Aspect Zoom function on your TV or DVD player)
5/5/2010 11:31:10 PM
There were TONS of DVDs in non 16x9 format. This is not a new thing for blu rays.
5/5/2010 11:50:27 PM
5/6/2010 12:42:24 AM
[Edited on May 6, 2010 at 1:18 AM. Reason : .]
5/6/2010 1:18:16 AM
I don't see any trolling in this threadAlso every single Wide Screen DVD I have is in 16x9 with no borders unless it's a 4x3 (which is Standard)Can you name a few popular WS DVDs with aspect ratios different from 1.85:1? Maybe I just never noticed.[Edited on May 6, 2010 at 7:54 AM. Reason : .]
5/6/2010 7:50:32 AM
Last SamuraiIndependence DayOld SchoolWedding Crashersetc.
5/6/2010 8:34:11 AM
5/6/2010 10:17:57 AM
5/6/2010 5:58:06 PM
What pisses me off is they they actually encode 280 lines of black bars (26% of the picture) and sell 800 lines as "1080p". Those black bars consume a fair amount of the encoding bitrate because the sharp edges are hard to resolve using DCTs because they have a high frequency content. If they just encoded it at 1920x800 and let the player add the black bars, then that bandwidth could be spent encoding the actual picture content. Additionally, the player would be able to tell that the film is not the same aspect as your display and crop automatically if that's what you wanted or use custom bars to fill the unused space.The main feature on all Blu-Ray discs is encoded at 1920x1080 with black bars added if it doesn't fit in the frame, which is completely stupid.
5/6/2010 6:19:36 PM
5/6/2010 6:34:58 PM
^^It depends on the compression being used on whether the black bars take up a lot of space or not. Regardless, its probably a lot easier to make everything 16:9 than to have the player handle each aspect ratio differently...not like theres only 2-3 ARs to consider.^Reading comprehension is good...I didnt say anything about DAR not being 16:9.
5/6/2010 8:11:53 PM
5/6/2010 8:23:28 PM
Not true. The easy way to tell is to look closely at the edge of the black bar. If it's not razor-sharp (i.e. color bleeds into the black bar or vice versa), then the bitrate is not high enough to fully resolve the source frame. The worse the edge looks, the worse the rest of the frame matches the source. This is noticeable on probably 30% of the Blu-Rays I've seen (I've seen a 178 on Netflix so far that were not 16:9). Also, a lot of newer movies are coming from 4K (4096x2160) ~50-100Mbps sources.
5/6/2010 10:57:14 PM
^^^^ so what you’re saying is that the blurays aren’t encoded anamorphically[Edited on May 6, 2010 at 11:18 PM. Reason : ]
5/6/2010 11:16:23 PM