In any case, a 4:3 video will play on a 4:3 TV and fill the screen. Most of them will deinterlace telecined or interlaced video, and they will do it with the quickest, cheapest, and worst methods possible. If you want to mount this on UTube or similar sites, consult their requirements for your type of video. How most set top players and TV's will handle 768x576 is anybody's guess. Resizing telecined video without removing the pulldown-interlaced frames will result in visible distortion. Some encoders will accept that frame size (and some will not, if you ask for MPEG), but most MPEG encoders will resize to 720x576 on output whether you want it or not. You can skip all that and just cut off the edge pixels but resize to 768x576 as you did earlier, but you encode it for PC display only. So manono and I deinterlaced the clip and removed duplicate frames to restore the original frame rate of ~18fps, cut 96 pixels off the the left, 96 pixels off the right, resized to 720x576, and added pulldown flags to make 18fps film play at 25fps. Standard definition MPEG requires that you encode with non-square pixels (720x576 to play at a 4:3 aspect ratio). The processed samples from manono and myself were sized and encoded so that they could be burned to disc, and therefore would play properly on either a TV or a PC at 4:3. That looks excellent To be honest, it will take too long to color-correct the whole 25 or so minutes, but how did you do the cutting? I's for certain they didn't come from the original film. The images are 4:3, as displayed on TV.Īs you can see, the vid has some low-bitrate compression artifacts especially on motion. It took some tricks to get rid of that "blue fog". I also fixed levels and color a bit: I got tired of watching purple men riding on sissy-blue motorbikes. The bike wheel on the left was distorted by the camera shutter's slow speed, but in the pics below you can see that your crop+resize makes it a little worse. Granted, the proportion stretch isn't all that much in this case, but it's there ( top image, below). You've lost some portion of the original image as well as distrorting it by removing too much from the bottom and resizing it (and resizing interlaced/pulldown video isn't a good idea). That's a 4:3 image alright, but you can't encode PAL DVD at that frame size. I couldn't upload the video as I don't have a URL account location but here is a snapshot taken from VLC The image you posted has a frame size of 768x576. You could probably use virtualdub or similar. In addition I used the cropping tool to get rid of the ragered frame line at the bottom and right. I quickly used ConvertXToDVD to make a new VOB using 4:3 as the project and Pan and Scan option.
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