I bought this movie *yesterday* and attempted to watch it last night. Fifty-two minutes into the movie the scene pixelates! Why oh why did they try to compress a six hour movie onto just two discs?
Anyone else have problems?
JLyon1515
09-15-04, 02:19 PM
Ever thought that maybe it's just your disc that is bad? 6 hours on 2 discs seems perfectly fine to me.
Duality
09-15-04, 02:35 PM
let me tell you, the first thing I did was return that damn DVD this morning. The store was out of stock so I'll be shopping again tonight.
Furthermore, I've been with DVD since the beginning and six hours on two discs is ridiculous! This format has been riddled with pixelation, freezing, and skipping problems since day one. I'm sick of it.
tommy28
09-15-04, 02:49 PM
Originally posted by Duality
let me tell you, the first thing I did was return that damn DVD this morning. The store was out of stock so I'll be shopping again tonight.
Furthermore, I've been with DVD since the beginning and six hours on two discs is ridiculous! This format has been riddled with pixelation, freezing, and skipping problems since day one. I'm sick of it.
not at my house,400 movies and iv never had a problem.ops,make that one problem,my Panny dvdplayer started to have problems after 3 years,purchased a new one and away i went.
Duality
09-15-04, 02:58 PM
I find your claim difficult to believe. One of my dearest friends has a DENON and even he has had a few "bad" discs.
Regardless, just wait, your day is coming. :)
Duality
09-16-04, 10:23 AM
I found another copy of Angels in America last night. The first disc looks great - no pixelation. I'm watching disc 2 tonight, here's hoping. :)
Rypro 525
09-16-04, 10:29 AM
now, when this originally aired on hbo, it was aired in 2 3 hour plus segments, so thats how (and is) the dvd is presented.
Joe Molotov
09-16-04, 02:42 PM
Originally posted by Duality
Furthermore, I've been with DVD since the beginning and six hours on two discs is ridiculous! This format has been riddled with pixelation, freezing, and skipping problems since day one. I'm sick of it.
Return of the King was 3 1/3 hours long on one disc and it didn't have any problems with pixelation or skipping. Sounds like you either have a knack for picking the bad discs or your DVD player doesn't love you. ;)
puddytay
09-16-04, 03:02 PM
I watched disc 1 last night and it didn't pixalate once. Actually the picture was quite great. The movie isn't very good. I rented this blindly thinking it was a movie. Had no idea it was this. Even though I've watched the first 2hrs I don't plan on finishing it.
adamblast
09-16-04, 03:04 PM
Originally posted by Rypro 525
now, when this originally aired on hbo, it was aired in 2 3 hour plus segments, so thats how (and is) the dvd is presented. The play itself is in two parts, written to be performed over 2 nights. Millinium Approaches and Perestroika. One 3-hour show on each disc makes sense.
Splitting it into 2-hour chunks on three discs, while it would make for higher encoding, would also lessen the impact (IMO)...
adamblast
09-16-04, 03:11 PM
Originally posted by puddytay
The movie isn't very good. I rented this blindly thinking it was a movie. Had no idea it was this. Even though I've watched the first 2hrs I don't plan on finishing it. Meanwhile, many critics have said it's the best and most important film version of a play since Streetcar. I do agree it's not for all tastes. I wouldn't even recommend it for most of my friends. But it is a very, very good movie.
Duality
09-17-04, 09:03 AM
looked great! There wasn't any pixelation - whew. BTW, the movie is absolute magic with a message - to say the least. If you are gay or have gay friends or family, it's a must-see!
Josh Z
09-17-04, 04:42 PM
Originally posted by Duality
Furthermore, I've been with DVD since the beginning and six hours on two discs is ridiculous!
If the discs are dual-layered, you can comfortably fit 2 hours to a layer without any significant problems, which would equal 4 hours to a disc side. If they had wanted to, they could have fit the whole thing onto one double-sided "flipper" disc.
If you're still using the same DVD player you bought in 1997, it's more likely the player's fault than the disc authoring.