Posts: 848
Threads: 202
Joined: 2019 Aug
Thanks: 1229
Given 1152 thank(s) in 382 post(s)
Country:
Just wanted to get a feel for what the preferred approach would be on this. I've got a project in the works that's combining 1:78:1 HD blu ray footage with 4:3 additional TV footage. Keeping toying with the best way to approach it. The running time would be around 4 hours, 2 hours of 1:78:1 and 2 hours of 4:3.
Option 1 would be having a shifting aspect ratio throughout. That would preserve as much of the picture as possible, but it's going to be quite jarring given there is so much 4:3 footage.
Option 2 would be cropping the 1:78:1 footage so it's the same aspect ratio as the 4:3, that way there is a consistent aspect ratio throughout.
Of course Option 3 would be to do both Option 1 and Option 2 - so people have the choice - but it's more work.
Thoughts?
Posts: 600
Threads: 44
Joined: 2021 Jul
Thanks: 450
Given 484 thank(s) in 241 post(s)
Country:
Could you use a PGS Sub track to overlay black bars onto the 4:3 footage? Then you would get both with less work and only one encode.
Posts: 848
Threads: 202
Joined: 2019 Aug
Thanks: 1229
Given 1152 thank(s) in 382 post(s)
Country:
Hmm I didn't think of that as an option - I could have a play around and see how it works. I guess the potential problem would be if the 1:78:1 footage needed to be cropped non centrally. But thanks I'll see how it works.
Posts: 5,031
Threads: 175
Joined: 2015 Jan
Thanks: 3180
Given 2944 thank(s) in 1285 post(s)
Country:
How much switching is there? I'm kind of use to switching aspect ratios these days and I suspect many others are also.
Posts: 2,051
Threads: 56
Joined: 2016 Dec
Thanks: 162
Given 1011 thank(s) in 614 post(s)
A 'middle ground' option would be to crop both ARs to 1.66:1, therefore losing a little off the sides of the 1.78:1 footage while losing a little off the top/bottom of the 4:3 footage. This could be presented pillarboxed and still maintain blu ray compliance
Posts: 863
Threads: 5
Joined: 2015 Apr
Thanks: 186
Given 212 thank(s) in 145 post(s)
Country:
2023-03-25, 10:36 AM
(This post was last modified: 2023-03-25, 10:39 AM by X5gb.)
No need to crop either (especially 16/9 blu-ray footage), go with switching ar, like PDB, I’m used to it, and prefer it to cropping. Big Open Matte fan though, so am biased. How about making two versions at the same time, one cropped, one not, then you can please everyone.
Posts: 71
Threads: 8
Joined: 2020 Oct
Thanks: 4
Given 18 thank(s) in 8 post(s)
Country:
That would depend on what you're trying to do. I'm guessing that the 1.78 is theatrical and 1.33 a later TV version?
If you're creating an extended theatrical version, then use 1.78 throughout and crop thoughtfully (assuming open-matte and sufficient picture quality). All the footage was taken at the same time, so it would have been framed with widescreen in mind. Added bonus - no black bars!
If you're creating an extended TV version, then use 1.33. The movie would have been cropped/opened for TV. Everyone making the movie would have known it was eventually going to be shown at 1.33, and there's a good chance it was also photographed TV-safe. This includes oddballs like the TV version of Earthquake, whose TV portions were made long after the movie premiered. A 1.33 presentation of that would be historically accurate.
I would pick one aspect ratio and stick to it. If the TV portions are open-matte, then I'd choose 1.78 and crop.