Postby Byron » 19 Jul 2005 19:46
It has occurred to me that both the menus and the making-of featurettes included on Anchor Bay's Evil Dead II and Army of Darkness DVDs appear in fullscreen when I view them on a DVD player that is configured for and connected to a 4:3 television, while they appear in letterboxed 16:9 when I view them on a 4:3 computer monitor using VLC media player. The actual movies (as opposed to the menus and featurettes) appear in letterboxed 16:9 regardless of whether I view them with the DVD player or VLC media player.
I don't know a lot about DVD authoring/encoding, nor do I know about the internal workings of VLC media player and its handling of DVD playback. Nevertheless, I think that the explanation must be that there is a flag that tells the DVD player that the 16:9 feature presentations must not under any circumstances be cropped to 4:3, but rather letterboxed so that the left and right sides of the picture are preserved. For the menus and featurettes, on the other hand, the flag informs the DVD player that it is OK--or even preferable--to crop the 16:9 picture to 4:3 if the player is in fact connected to a 4:3 television.
I knew that a DVD player configured for a 4:3 TV would automatically letterbox an anamorphic widescreen picture, but I did not until now realize that DVD players could also, under some circumstances, trim the left and right sides of a 16:9 picture so that it fills the screen of a 4:3 television. I guess I thought that there were separate widescreen and fullscreen versions of the DVD menus; in fact, it seems that there is only one, widescreen version of the menus, which can be cropped to a 4:3 aspect ratio when viewed on a 4:3 display. I have also noticed that my DVD player can be configured for 4:3-letterboxed (the default) or 4:3-"Pan & Scan" (crop), but apparently the DVD flag usually overrides this setting, rarely leaving the decision up to the owner of DVD player.
VLC media player does not seem to honor this "how to handle 16:9 on a 4:3 display" flag in the same way that a DVD player does. VLC media player never crops the picture to 4:3; an anamorphic widescreen picture is always shown in letterboxed format on a 4:3 monitor. This is fine if the left and right sides of the picture contain additional meaningful video, as is the case with the menus on the Evil Dead II and Army of Darkness DVDs. However, the authors of these two DVDs seem to have decided, for some strange reason, to encode the two 4:3 making-of featurettes as 16:9 rather than 4:3, with nothing but black bars filling the extra space along the left and right sides. I have noticed that the TV spots included on the Dawn of the Dead DVD--also from Anchor Bay--have the vertical black bars as well.
As far as I know, VLC media player does not have an easy-to-access "Crop to 4:3" option. (Nor does it have a "Crop to 16:9" option for cases in which the picture has encoded horizontal bars on the top and bottom and one wishes to watch the picture fullscreen on a 16:9 monitor.) The crop filter supposedly has an automatic cropping feature, but I couldn't get it to work.
The solution, I have discovered, is to manually configure the crop filter. (The crop filter can be enabled and configured via the preferences dialog.) For my 800x600 monitor, I had to type "540 x 480" (with spaces around the "x") in the "crop geometry (pixels)" text box in order get those two documentaries to fill the screen. (I also had to be sure to press STOP and then re-open the appropriate title of the DVD.) The reason that it needs to be "540 x 480" rather than "640 x 480" is that VLC media player (or at least my installation of VLC media player) seems to inflate the width of the crop geometry by about 18.4375%, and 18.4375% of 540 pixels happens to be about 100 pixels.
One disadvantage of this solution is that on-screen feedback no longer appears when, for example, the volume is changed or the movie is paused.