View Poll Results: Have you found 1.85:1 movies are really 1.77:1?
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Trouble With Harry aspect ratio trouble
#1
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Trouble With Harry aspect ratio trouble
Hello,
I just got a Universal DVD 2001 release region 1 of Hitchcock's "The Trouble with Harry" 1955.
The DVD itself and the case say the movie is 1.85:1. However, the movie completely fills the 16:9 screen which makes it 1.77:1.
It seems the movie has been cropped despite the advertising. For example, there is a shot of the no hunting sign which is cropped, you can't read the whole sign.
Has anyone else seen this issue on this movie or other movies? I checked the DVD player and it is set up for anamorphic widescreen presentation on my 16:9 TV screen.
Thanks.
-William
I just got a Universal DVD 2001 release region 1 of Hitchcock's "The Trouble with Harry" 1955.
The DVD itself and the case say the movie is 1.85:1. However, the movie completely fills the 16:9 screen which makes it 1.77:1.
It seems the movie has been cropped despite the advertising. For example, there is a shot of the no hunting sign which is cropped, you can't read the whole sign.
Has anyone else seen this issue on this movie or other movies? I checked the DVD player and it is set up for anamorphic widescreen presentation on my 16:9 TV screen.
Thanks.
-William
Last edited by William_K_F; 01-12-07 at 11:10 PM.
#2
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The difference between 1.85:1 and 1.77:1 is only 4 percent, which is less image than is lost because of overscan on most TVs (or because of overprojection in theaters).
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The remastered edition in the Masterpiece Boxset is clearly 1.85:1
I can't say for sure about the old 2000 edition, but if there was a framing problem, it was fixed in the boxset.
I can't say for sure about the old 2000 edition, but if there was a framing problem, it was fixed in the boxset.
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This practice is commonplace because, as Mr. Salty notes, the difference is (relatively) minor and those responsible for home video packaging do not have absolute precision as their top priority.