2018-02-23, 07:13 AM
Yeah, it would likely be erratic af, but might still be fun I think.
You know what would be even cooler? A plugin for a video player that can read specific metadata from the video stream and automatically "extract" one of the three contained sources. That is, the metadata would contain the exact coordinates of the edges of each contained frame, and then on playback you could choose to simply display one of these as big as possible on the screen. That metadata could itself come in the form of subtitles, or be embedded in the video stream, for example I think h264 has some potential for custom metadata, though it would probably need one to modify the source code of x264. If someone were dedicated enough to write such a plugin, this could be fun.
That way you could distribute a 3-AR version in a single file. Kinda surprised this was never done by the industry tbh.
Think about the scenario: You put in your Dark Knight Blu Ray and your Blu Ray player offers you the option to choose any of these:
1. 2.35:1 throughout
2. 2.35:1 with IMAX as 16:9
3. 2:35:1 with IMAX full 4:3
4. 16:9 throughout
5. 16:9 throughout, IMAX 4:3
6. 4:3 throughout
The playback software/blu ray player could automatically adapt to the display that is being used and utilize as much of the screen as possible for each shot. If you have a 4:3 screen, it will show full IMAX scenes etc. Studios could create individual framing for each scene for each AR.
It would be rather trivial to create software-wise (compared to all the other stuff codecs do), especially when you start out with one main master anyway.
You know what would be even cooler? A plugin for a video player that can read specific metadata from the video stream and automatically "extract" one of the three contained sources. That is, the metadata would contain the exact coordinates of the edges of each contained frame, and then on playback you could choose to simply display one of these as big as possible on the screen. That metadata could itself come in the form of subtitles, or be embedded in the video stream, for example I think h264 has some potential for custom metadata, though it would probably need one to modify the source code of x264. If someone were dedicated enough to write such a plugin, this could be fun.
That way you could distribute a 3-AR version in a single file. Kinda surprised this was never done by the industry tbh.
Think about the scenario: You put in your Dark Knight Blu Ray and your Blu Ray player offers you the option to choose any of these:
1. 2.35:1 throughout
2. 2.35:1 with IMAX as 16:9
3. 2:35:1 with IMAX full 4:3
4. 16:9 throughout
5. 16:9 throughout, IMAX 4:3
6. 4:3 throughout
The playback software/blu ray player could automatically adapt to the display that is being used and utilize as much of the screen as possible for each shot. If you have a 4:3 screen, it will show full IMAX scenes etc. Studios could create individual framing for each scene for each AR.
It would be rather trivial to create software-wise (compared to all the other stuff codecs do), especially when you start out with one main master anyway.