 |
|
|
24-08-2009, 8:43 PM
|
#1 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 477
Thanks: Gave 38, Got 16
|
The Abyss
Guys & Girls
Tried to play the special edition DVD last night and could only get it to play as a box in the middle of the TV. Had a quick scan on internet and found that is because the DVD is not anamorphic and plays as a wide screen under 4:3 restrictions! I can't remember it being this way - but maybe it has just been that long since I last watched it, and I haven't ever actually watched it on a wide screen TV.
Can anyone confirm this or provide a work around?
Cheers in advance.
__________________
Who's the more foolish - The fool or the fool who follows him?
|
|
|
25-08-2009, 7:16 AM
|
#2 (permalink)
|
|
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 1,157
Thanks: Gave 20, Got 100
|
Re: The Abyss
The Abyss was only ever released as a non-anamophic, letterboxed DVD. There must be a zoom option to change the ratio on your telly so the image fits.
|
|
|
25-08-2009, 12:33 PM
|
#3 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 158
Thanks: Gave 27, Got 19
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by DenzilTK421
Guys & Girls
Tried to play the special edition DVD last night and could only get it to play as a box in the middle of the TV. Had a quick scan on internet and found that is because the DVD is not anamorphic and plays as a wide screen under 4:3 restrictions! I can't remember it being this way - but maybe it has just been that long since I last watched it, and I haven't ever actually watched it on a wide screen TV.
Can anyone confirm this or provide a work around?
Cheers in advance.
|
If it's only playing with black bars on all 4 sides, if your TV has a zoom function try that (it might have different zoom options). The zoom option might be on the remote and/or in one of the TV's menus. If your TV has a zoom option (it might be under "Size" or "Screen Mode" in the menu) but it isn't letting you change it and you are outputting the DVD through a Blu-ray or upscaling player (eg. through HDMI) try reducing the output resolution of the player - outputting at 576i might give you more zoom options than at 1080p.
Last edited by 200p; 25-08-2009 at 12:35 PM.
|
|
|
25-08-2009, 3:56 PM
|
#4 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 477
Thanks: Gave 38, Got 16
|
Re: The Abyss
mmm thought as much - didn't really want to have to resort to the zoom function.
Thanks for your help though.
__________________
Who's the more foolish - The fool or the fool who follows him?
|
|
|
26-08-2009, 12:15 PM
|
#5 (permalink)
|
|
Distinguished Member
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 12,900
Thanks: Gave 124, Got 983
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by DenzilTK421
mmm thought as much - didn't really want to have to resort to the zoom function.
Thanks for your help though.
|
The zoom or 4:3 Letterbox mode is the only way to see non anamoprhic DVD's at the right aspect ratio height otherwise, it is just squashed.
Btw, you shouldn't be getting black on all 4 sides but just really big borders top and bottom than normal. The zoom mode then reduces the top and bottom so it gets to the right 2.35:1 aspect ratio size.
Make sure the player is set to 16:9 and not 4:3 then use the right zoom mode.
It really needs a proper Blu Ray release after all this time. It seems Cameron hasn't signed off a 16:9 version yet.
|
|
|
26-08-2009, 8:26 PM
|
#6 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Kirkcaldy, Fife
Posts: 722
Thanks: Gave 16, Got 13
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by nwgarratt
Btw, you shouldn't be getting black on all 4 sides but just really big borders top and bottom than normal. The zoom mode then reduces the top and bottom so it gets to the right 2.35:1 aspect ratio size.
Make sure the player is set to 16:9 and not 4:3 then use the right zoom mode..
|
yes he should be getting it on all 4 sides, non anamorphic dvds display that way even when the dvd player is set at 16;9.
the only way to to remove the side bars is to use the zoom mode.
it is already displaying in the correct aspect ratio just not filling the screen.
__________________
SCREENS:Panasonic Viera, 50" & 26"(both 1080p24 compatible) AUDIO:Tannoy S/EFX 7.1,Yamaha DSP-AX763 (DTS-HD & DD True) SOURCES:Popcorn Hour A110 (1.5tb), WD-HD Media player (2x1tb),Panasonic DVD 1080p, PS3(uk)-60gb,WII. with Qued & ixos Wiring and interconnects
|
|
|
26-08-2009, 8:53 PM
|
#7 (permalink)
|
|
Distinguished Member
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 12,900
Thanks: Gave 124, Got 983
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by beecee
yes he should be getting it on all 4 sides, non anamorphic dvds display that way even when the dvd player is set at 16;9.
the only way to to remove the side bars is to use the zoom mode.
it is already displaying in the correct aspect ratio just not filling the screen.
|
I have been dealing with non anamorphic since Laserdisc. With a widescreen TV, he should be be getting larger borders top and bottom as usual. It will be squashed, and when using the zoom, the aspect ratio will be corrected to the right height. With 2.35:1 like The Abyss, the borders will be reduced top and bottom so they are correct size. With 1.85:1 it will fill the screen after zooming (as long as overscan is used). There will still be thin top and bottom borders if there is no overscan.
If he has borders all around then it sounds like he has the player set to 4:3 not 16:9. Since the TV is new, it could be.
|
|
|
26-08-2009, 10:30 PM
|
#8 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 584
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 35
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by nwgarratt
I have been dealing with non anamorphic since Laserdisc. With a widescreen TV, he should be be getting larger borders top and bottom as usual. It will be squashed, and when using the zoom, the aspect ratio will be corrected to the right height. With 2.35:1 like The Abyss, the borders will be reduced top and bottom so they are correct size. With 1.85:1 it will fill the screen after zooming (as long as overscan is used). There will still be thin top and bottom borders if there is no overscan.
If he has borders all around then it sounds like he has the player set to 4:3 not 16:9. Since the TV is new, it could be.
|
You are wrong.
A non anamorphic dvd does not contain the 16:9 flag which is why its letterboxed.
Without the 16:9 flag the player will output it as 4:3 regardless of what its set to.
If the player is set to 16:9 it means its set to read the 16:9 flag on discs and then stretch the picture but The Abyss has no flag for the player to read
A non anamorphic dvd will display borders on top and bottom of a 4:3 tv and without a 16:9 flag will also have borders on the sides of a wide tv as it will read it as 4:3.
I've been watching letterboxed material since VHS and LD too.
My player is also set to 16:9 and I've just dug out The Abyss to test.
As expected the film had borders on all 4 sides. I used the zoom mode and filled the screen but still had the regular size borders top and bottom
Best way to check is to look at the menus which ARE 16:9 as are the copyright notices.
On my player the menus open out correctly then go to 4:3 when the film starts so the OP has done nothing wrong
Thats what happens if the player is set to 16:9 and your tv is set to AUTO switch between 4:3 and 16:9.
Obviously different settings on the tv can change the way discs are displayed.
Many punters have everything stretched even if its not wide
Can the OP confirm his screen is filled when the menus appear?
__________________
Topfield motorised sat,Sky HD,V+,Humax Freeview PVR,Pioneer DVD/HDD 560 (and 630),Panasonic BD30 (Multiregion for BD and dvd),Denon amp,Monitor Audio ( 6 speakers),MJ Acoustics sub
Last edited by mikegambit; 26-08-2009 at 10:45 PM.
|
|
|
26-08-2009, 11:06 PM
|
#9 (permalink)
|
|
Distinguished Member
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 12,900
Thanks: Gave 124, Got 983
|
Re: The Abyss
Not wrong.
I never said anything about the 16:9 flag.
Most people will have players set to 16:9 as BD and most DVD's are 16:9.
Notice the extra big borders top and bottom and no left and right borders. It is squashed.
http://www.apah20.dsl.pipex.com/pics/169.jpg
Now with zoom mode (called 4:3 expanded on my TV). The borders are the right size and the correct aspect ratio.
http://www.apah20.dsl.pipex.com/pics/expanded.jpg
If the player is set to 4:3, I get borders top and bottom and at the sides as the non anamorphic is shown at the correct aspect ratio. It is not squashed but it only uses the middle of the screen. I have to manually set it to 4:3 expanded to fill the screen properly. That is why I said his player may be set to 4:3.
Last edited by nwgarratt; 26-08-2009 at 11:09 PM.
|
|
|
27-08-2009, 9:18 PM
|
#10 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 477
Thanks: Gave 38, Got 16
|
Re: The Abyss
Good evening chaps - I see this has caused a small debate.
FYI - the TV and the dvd player are both set 16:9. The copyright & warnings are full frame and fill the screen, as is the menu of the film. Once the film starts its the black bars on all four edges.
I'll be happy to post some screen shots if it helps.
__________________
Who's the more foolish - The fool or the fool who follows him?
|
|
|
27-08-2009, 9:37 PM
|
#11 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Kirkcaldy, Fife
Posts: 722
Thanks: Gave 16, Got 13
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by nwgarratt
Not wrong.
I never said anything about the 16:9 flag.
Most people will have players set to 16:9 as BD and most DVD's are 16:9.
Notice the extra big borders top and bottom and no left and right borders. It is squashed.
http://www.apah20.dsl.pipex.com/pics/169.jpg
Now with zoom mode (called 4:3 expanded on my TV). The borders are the right size and the correct aspect ratio.
http://www.apah20.dsl.pipex.com/pics/expanded.jpg
If the player is set to 4:3, I get borders top and bottom and at the sides as the non anamorphic is shown at the correct aspect ratio. It is not squashed but it only uses the middle of the screen. I have to manually set it to 4:3 expanded to fill the screen properly. That is why I said his player may be set to 4:3.
|
i think what your tv is doing is to do with the 16:9 flag, its detecting it on the start up menu, but not reverting to 4:3 for the film, as you state if the dvd player is set to 4;3 you get the boxed image.
and the expand image feature is more to do with pal/ntsc and an rgb signal than the aspect ratio.
__________________
SCREENS:Panasonic Viera, 50" & 26"(both 1080p24 compatible) AUDIO:Tannoy S/EFX 7.1,Yamaha DSP-AX763 (DTS-HD & DD True) SOURCES:Popcorn Hour A110 (1.5tb), WD-HD Media player (2x1tb),Panasonic DVD 1080p, PS3(uk)-60gb,WII. with Qued & ixos Wiring and interconnects
|
|
|
27-08-2009, 9:39 PM
|
#12 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Camp Crystal Lake
Posts: 868
Thanks: Gave 3, Got 31
|
Re: The Abyss
Just manually set your t.v to 16:9 when playing. It will 4:3 the image as its not anamorphic and as the film has an Aspect ratio of 2:35:1 the black bars will look alot more intruding if it was a non anamorphic 1:85:1 it would'nt look as bad.
__________________
All post © Marv 2004
PSN: Marvdogger
Marv's DvD's
|
|
|
28-08-2009, 1:51 AM
|
#13 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 584
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 35
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by nwgarratt
Not wrong.
I never said anything about the 16:9 flag.
Most people will have players set to 16:9 as BD and most DVD's are 16:9.
Notice the extra big borders top and bottom and no left and right borders. It is squashed.
http://www.apah20.dsl.pipex.com/pics/169.jpg
Now with zoom mode (called 4:3 expanded on my TV). The borders are the right size and the correct aspect ratio.
http://www.apah20.dsl.pipex.com/pics/expanded.jpg
If the player is set to 4:3, I get borders top and bottom and at the sides as the non anamorphic is shown at the correct aspect ratio. It is not squashed but it only uses the middle of the screen. I have to manually set it to 4:3 expanded to fill the screen properly. That is why I said his player may be set to 4:3.
|
What his player is set to is irrelevant if the disc has no 16:9 flag.
But the fact that his menus fill the screen and the film does not shows that his player is set to 16:9 and what I said was completely correct.
If a disc has no 16:9 flag then any squashed images are purely down to incorrect settings on your tv because if its a 4:3 disc then there are no anamorphically squeezed images on the disc
The Abyss has no 16:9 flag so whether your BD or dvd player is set to 16:9 is irrelevant. If it is set to 16:9 the disc will still display with 4 borders .
This all assumes that tv's are set to display 4:3 images as 4:3 and not stretched in any way.
If the tv is set to any other setting then it won't switch between 4:3 and 16:9 automatically and 4:3 images might well be squashed or stretched but that is purely down to the tv being set wrong
I find it hard to believe that this very basic "problem" can still cause hassle more than 10 years since anamorphic presentations appeared
One other point - not all tv's will lable their ratios the same.
I've seen tv's where the AUTO setting means AUTO stretching everything.
I've seen tv's where in order for the tv to auto switch between ratios he tv has to be set to 4:3.
__________________
Topfield motorised sat,Sky HD,V+,Humax Freeview PVR,Pioneer DVD/HDD 560 (and 630),Panasonic BD30 (Multiregion for BD and dvd),Denon amp,Monitor Audio ( 6 speakers),MJ Acoustics sub
Last edited by mikegambit; 28-08-2009 at 1:59 AM.
|
|
|
28-08-2009, 3:20 PM
|
#14 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 477
Thanks: Gave 38, Got 16
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by mikegambit
I find it hard to believe that this very basic "problem" can still cause hassle more than 10 years since anamorphic presentations appeared
|
Because of user ignorance?
__________________
Who's the more foolish - The fool or the fool who follows him?
|
|
|
28-08-2009, 4:16 PM
|
#15 (permalink)
|
|
Member
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Camp Crystal Lake
Posts: 868
Thanks: Gave 3, Got 31
|
Re: The Abyss
Quote:
Originally Posted by mikegambit
I find it hard to believe that this very basic "problem" can still cause hassle more than 10 years since anamorphic presentations appeared
|
This lad i work with zooms alot of his dvds as "they have borders" i try to explain to him that films shot in certain aspect ratio's will still have borders even on a WS t.v as thats how there were shot and ment to be viewed, but he just dos'nt get it.
|
|
|
| |