So, I was planning my first HD preservation. After much trial and error I picked some editing software that works well for me.
The movie: The Librarian: Quest for the Spear. Briefly: The U.S. DVD has an extended cut running 12 minutes longer, there is no U.S. blu-ray and the international discs are the original TV runtime.
I snagged the extended cut from TubiTV. It's low bitrate @ 2.4GB. I was going to edit it with a Blu-ray source, inserting the missing pieces and swapping at least one wrong shot compared to the U.S. DVD. I also planned to sync it to the DVD audio since Tubi does stereo AAC and the BD is only 640kbps 5.1, hardly worth editing the audio tracks and re-encoding.
That's when something interesting happened. I started playing around with AnyStream. The free version can do Amazon Prime (which I don't have), but it can, as a result, rip freevee... which has the extended cut of the movie weighing in at 10.3GB with 640kbps 5.1 DD+. Hardly worth editing at all now.
Except: The freevee 5.1 audio has (at the very least) the center and right audio channels swapped. I haven't aggressively tested the rear or LFE channels to see in they're in the right place.
My first thought was just to, again, sync the DVD audio. Except freevee's version is 24fps, not 23.976 like my other three sources. So I guess not only do I have to resync the track, I need to adjust the frame rate... which means the same needs to be done for the subtitles, and yeah, now I'm hating this.
The stereo track on freevee seems okay, but that doesn't help. I don't know if a lower bitrate 5.1 track would be in better shape or not.
I guess I could swap the audio channels, but AFAIK, there is no way to do that without decoding to 6 WAV files, re-arranging and re-encoding... to 5.1 PCM? FLAC?
Anyone have any good suggestions, because I hate all the answers.
The movie: The Librarian: Quest for the Spear. Briefly: The U.S. DVD has an extended cut running 12 minutes longer, there is no U.S. blu-ray and the international discs are the original TV runtime.
I snagged the extended cut from TubiTV. It's low bitrate @ 2.4GB. I was going to edit it with a Blu-ray source, inserting the missing pieces and swapping at least one wrong shot compared to the U.S. DVD. I also planned to sync it to the DVD audio since Tubi does stereo AAC and the BD is only 640kbps 5.1, hardly worth editing the audio tracks and re-encoding.
That's when something interesting happened. I started playing around with AnyStream. The free version can do Amazon Prime (which I don't have), but it can, as a result, rip freevee... which has the extended cut of the movie weighing in at 10.3GB with 640kbps 5.1 DD+. Hardly worth editing at all now.
Except: The freevee 5.1 audio has (at the very least) the center and right audio channels swapped. I haven't aggressively tested the rear or LFE channels to see in they're in the right place.
My first thought was just to, again, sync the DVD audio. Except freevee's version is 24fps, not 23.976 like my other three sources. So I guess not only do I have to resync the track, I need to adjust the frame rate... which means the same needs to be done for the subtitles, and yeah, now I'm hating this.
The stereo track on freevee seems okay, but that doesn't help. I don't know if a lower bitrate 5.1 track would be in better shape or not.
I guess I could swap the audio channels, but AFAIK, there is no way to do that without decoding to 6 WAV files, re-arranging and re-encoding... to 5.1 PCM? FLAC?
Anyone have any good suggestions, because I hate all the answers.