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I'm collecting VHS, primarily Fullscreen, I occassionally come across titles that, rather than stating that they are Fullscreen or Widescreen, say they are "modified to fit your TV" Anyone have any experience with this, what does it mean? Currently looking at Requiem For a Dream, edited version, description - Canadian Home Video. " The film has been modified from it's original version. it has been formatted to fit your TV." I haveĀ brilliant Toshiba TV from 1999, which I still use for VHS.
RegardsĀ Glastontown.
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On the old CRT Tvs watching Videos/DVDs I used to take the backs off and then adjust the POTs (Horizontal) to enable me to see more in the movie! lol...
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2018-05-09, 08:18 PM
(This post was last modified: 2018-05-09, 08:20 PM by CSchmidlapp.)
Haha. I had no idea you could do that on consumer CRT's.
Did it just adjust the over-scan, revealing more picture top, sides and bottom?
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Yes, the other way would be to get the TV into service mode if it had one!
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1:1.85 opening up into fullcreen, OK that explains a lot, I've noticed this with a fair proportion which are labelled wide-screen. How do you tell though, is it a lottery?
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Thanks guys, for the help and advice.
Sorry to take so long to get back, for some reason I couldn't log on.
Regards Ken.
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The best thing to do is check Imdb's technical specs. A lot of films shot 35mm spherical were released on VHS as open matte.
Sometimes it's nice having the extra image, but many times, you'll end up with booms in the shot or other things that were never intended to be seen.