I've noticed that a UK channel has widescreen versions of TOS. The zoomed in versions of the live action look pretty bad but I do enjoy the added detail at the sides of the new CGI effects and I wondered if it is possible to legally get these widescreen versions?
Yeah, it's usually the close-ups that suffer (and look weird) when they do this. The first three seasons of The X-Files on blu-ray suffer from these oddball cropped close-ups at times.
I'm no authority either, but I believe that's the disc structure just fooling the program into displaying each episode separately. I ripped a single episode and the final file-size was 8gb. The disc has four episodes on it, which would equal 64gb in total if they were all on there twice without branching.Unless I'm really interpreting the data wrong, I'm afraid that's not the case. Pressing the "angle" button just swaps you between one stream and another. You're not watching the same video stream with alternative clips, you're watching a whole thing either remastered or original effects.
Pop any of your TOS:R BD's into a program like DVDfab and you can see there are two versions of each episode included.
I'm by no means an authority on this matter, but that's what I'm seeing with my own two eyes.
I agree, it would've been better to simply leaves those seasons alone when it came to close ups shots. We've been accustom to seeing IMAX images be cropped and then transitioned to another format with Chris Nolan's The Dark Knight, I can't see why FOX just proceed with the process that way.Yeah, it's usually the close-ups that suffer (and look weird) when they do this. The first three seasons of The X-Files on blu-ray suffer from these oddball cropped close-ups at times.
I'd bet good money both of them have been shown cropped at some point.
Everything before 1953.Weren't some movies filmed in 1.33:1 that far back?
Weren't some movies filmed in 1.33:1 that far back?
Lots of haircuts in that trailer.Take a look here. I found a trailer for the W/S versions on Freeview in the UK. I hope you aren't region locked out of watching this.
http://www.cbsaction.tv/uk/shows.php?title=Star+Trek+-+The+Original+Series
You pan, scan, cut and paste.
I'm not even sure what all that means. Paste the missing material to where?You could conceivably make 16:9 versions by doing the pan-and-scan mentioned earlier in the thread (which would involve decapitation), and then cut and paste the missing original top and bottom content to create a true 16:9 image. There would be no butchering of the original image. You pan, scan, cut and paste. It would take work, but it isn't impossible.
How? I'm assuming by either stretching the image or by creating new material. Because those are the only two methods that could possibly be used if cropping is off the table.Hell, I saw someone (an amateur) make a 2:35 cut of a scene from Snow White (filmed in 1.37) without any cropping done.
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