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Hi guys,
I thought I could post this here because IC has failed to me this one, although I had no better success with CCE. Hope somebody can help 'cause I'm not very good at vdeo issues.
The fact is that I'm trying to backup the old 'Conquest of the Planet of the Apes', which comes with a bunch of extras containing the trailer of each movie and the Apes saga, and also a short TV promotion xommercial. Well the story is that starting from 'Planet of the Apes', the amount of money people put in filming each subsequent movie was reduced, and (I'm not sure but) I would say that the last ones were made for TV. I say all this because when I watch the extras from the original disc on my PC or TV, I can see that those corresponding to the first two movies are standard PAL, while those corresponding to the last movies look pretty different... somehow you can see (on the POC but not on the TV) thin horizontal lines in fast moving scenes. I guess this has to do with interlaced or deinterlaced material, but I can't tell.
Well, I tried to encode these extras with CCE but surprisingly enough CCE crashed everytime I tried to loadthe (otherwise standard) .avs file. fed up of that, I decided to give IC a go, since this is supposed to transcode the stream without changing its structure. Well then I succeded iun creating a set of VOB files with the extras, burned to a DVD-RW and tried on the TV. The result was a stuttering playback, where the image was sometimes playing jerky and sometimes producing 'ghost images' fllowing moving objects... I seem to remember I saw something similar 3 years ago when I tried to encode to SVCD mateiral I had to deinterlace, but I'm not sure... Anybody can gove me any advice about this one?
Thanks in advance.
its not one of those that has dual formats within the Titleset or something is it?
AFAIK, no. These DVDs have a pretty simple structure. Just VTS_01 and VTS_02. 02 goes for the main movie with a single PGC nd few chapters there. VTS_01 has the extras (and the mess...). Nevertheless, when you say 'dual format' you mean fullscreen and widescreen? The answe to this is no... |
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