Keith,
Some
films are shot full frame, but then masked to 2.35:1 or whatever the cinema
release ratio is intended to be. Thus the film you are _meant_ to see
is
the widescreen one, even though there is _less_ on
screen.
Occasionally broadcasters xmit such films without
re-applying the masking so you get the situation you have
observed.
I
can't remember the reasoning behind filming in this way rather than using a
widescreen camera - perhaps it is just to make TV transmission easier so
they
don't have to do a pan 'n scan version.......
So: WS
does not necessarily mean more, it just means perhaps 'more likely to be
like
the cinema release'.
Is
this better? Dunno mate, but personally I think _not_ seeing the top
of
Dr. Emmet Brown's head is a _good_ thing :-))
Tony
Interesting words......
interesting in that you shell out loads of dosh
for a
16:9 screen to avoid the black bars and then get DVD's that are wider than
16:9 so you still get black bars :-(
I
got conned with the BoxSet of "Back To The Future". It is a letterbox
format.
Sometime later I read that the films were shot as 4:3 with only certain
scenes
in 16:9. Last time it was on BBC1 I did a comparison, after all the whole
arguement FOR widescreen was to see the bits that were chopped off the
sides
of the 4:3 picture.
Sky
Digital was showing a 16:9 broadcast
BBC1
Terrestrial was showing a FullScreen 4:3 image
As I
"knew" the film wasnt really Widescreen I was
intrigued.....
Standing where I could see 2 TV's I did a
comparison.
The edges of the pictures were identical so I studied the top and bottom of
the picture.
4:3
picture - I could see Dr. Emmet Brown's entire head
16:9
picture - cut off halfway up his forehead
They
had cropped a 4:3 picture to 16:9 and were giving you LESS picture when the
sales pitch for W/S sets is that you get MORE picture.
All
my TV's are still 4:3 at the moment.
I
am
used to a 28" TV. To get the same HEIGHT of picture on a 16:9 set would
require a 36" WS which is too much money at the moment although they are
dropping quite quickly. Anything less than 36" WS would be a SHORTSCREEN
set
as the picture would not be as tall as the one I currently
watch.
BTW.
I havent seen the Panny
Keith
Two words. Aspect
Ratio.
Tim
-----Original
Message----- From: Gerard
McGovern [mailto:stuff@xxxxxxx] Sent: 11 March 2002 14:11 To: ukha_d@xxxxxxxSubject: RE: [ukha_d] Anyone seen the
Panny LCD TVs in the flesh
But they are so expensive. Why
not get a 15inch LCD computer monitor, buy a tuner and then buy a SCART to
VGA adapter?
For
more information: http://www.automatedhome.co.uk
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