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Author
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Topic: Cutting one frame from each second of film.
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Thomas Procyk
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1842
From: Royal Palm Beach, FL, USA
Registered: Feb 2002
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posted 11-18-2003 11:54 AM
Recently while watching a movie on TV, I noticed a strange abnormality. At first I thought it was my imagination, but as I kept watching it became more obvious. It seemed that every second the picture would "jump" ahead a frame or two, with the sound staying in sync. It became painfully apparent during any pan sequences or fast-motion. Sort of like trying to watch streaming video on a slow machine, except the picture never froze, it just jumped ahead.
Is this some sort of plot by the TV stations to further "cut" movies to squeeze them into the time alloted? Cutting one frame from each second of a 2 hour movie would only save you 5 minutes, but in TV terms, that's almost two commercial breaks.
Anyway, it became annoying to watch so I changed the channel. Has anyone ever seen this kind of "editing" before?
=TMP=
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Carl Martin
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1424
From: Oakland, CA, USA
Registered: Feb 2002
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posted 11-18-2003 04:28 PM
i find this all too easy to believe. they'll pan & scan, they'll play the whole thing faster, they'll run the credits at warp speed, squished into half the screen with a voiceover replacing the soundtrack, they'll edit for content, they'll insert commercials, etc. etc. boycott the b@st@rds.
one thing i'd like to see, that would allow for a vast increase in commercial time _and_ greatly improve the uninterrupted presentation of the movie is...
to play the movie letterboxed, in the top 1/2 or 2/3 of the screen, and run ads, network logos, what have you, silently in the bottom part of the screen. all the viewer has to do is cover up that portion of the screen and it's like watching a dvd. everybody's happy.
carl
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Thomas Procyk
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1842
From: Royal Palm Beach, FL, USA
Registered: Feb 2002
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posted 11-19-2003 01:34 PM
quote: to play the movie letterboxed, in the top 1/2 or 2/3 of the screen, and run ads, network logos, what have you, silently in the bottom part of the screen.
no, No, NO!! They already have all this garbage dancing all over the picture for up to a minute before or a minute after coming back from commercials. I was watching "City of Angels" about a week ago on TBS, and when they came back from commercial, this giant animated banner thing went WOOSH across the entire picture (blocking the whole frame at one point) and danced around at the bottom, telling me I am watching City of Angels... oh wait... and Sleepless in Seattle is up next... oh wait... and WWF Smackdown is on Monday night...
By the time they're done overlaying commercials, you've been distracted away from a good portion of the movie, only to be distracted again when it's time to go to commercial.
What Carl suggested has already been done by "The NEW TNN" (now Spike TV) where they would squeeze the picture to fit a black bar at the bottom with the network logo and a "ticker" that would change color and font every few minutes to tell you about various other nonsense the network is planning to show. Every time it changed, your eyes would be distracted to it, missing your show. that.
=TMP=
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Joe Schmidt
Expert Film Handler
Posts: 172
From: Billings, Montana, USA
Registered: Apr 2001
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posted 11-20-2003 06:16 AM
It's necessary to keep in mind here that all of these tv stations are businesses engaged in the continuous broadcasting of commercials, interrupted periodically by "entertainment."
Bobby Henderson has summarized the problem quite well but the problem remains: what do we do if the movie on the commercial-broadcasting channel is something good, such as the Spielberg mega-miniseries "TAKEN" on the Sci-Fi channel.
The manner of presentation on SciFi is singularly abysmal, including a huge bug on the lower right-hand corner and all the stuff Bobby mentioned. I have found that the only remedy is to employ a satellite PVR [mine is from Dish Network] and forget about trying to watch the movie at all the first time around. To enjoy the movie you must first do a little work.
Push the record button on the PVR a minute or so before the movie is scheduled to start, then go and do something else for about 35-40 minutes. Anything will do, commune with the cat, cremate something in the microwave to eat, read a magazine or an entertaining technical manual, you get the idea.
After this you pop a new blank film into the VCR, back up the PVR to the start of its recording, and begin taping the movie. I don't try to watch the movie at this point, have the sound down at a whisper level and continue doing something else. You'll know when the commersh hits because the sound will get much louder. Then you hit stop on the VCR, back up the tape and recue in record mode precisely at 2-3 frames into the commersh garbage break. [Why? Because the VCR will back up the tape just a smidge.]
With the VCR cued, you then zap past the garbage in the PVR and pause [cue] it right at a frame or two before the movie starts again. Final step is start the VCR recording again, and 0.5 seconds later press PLAY on the PVR. This sequence is necessary because the VCR needs about 0.5 seconds to start going again.
Then its back to reading your book until the next garbage break, when the process repeats.
In my case, having had years of practice at this, the zapping of each garbage break and restarting the tape is achieved in about one minute. A FF on the PVR of 15x speed is about right. If you have done your work well, you are rewarded with a clean garbage-free tape of the movie, or at least as much of it as they didn't cut out... this remedy cannot restore missing parts of the movie. And the whole job is done in about 95 minutes for a mess that was 2 hours in real time. Plus you have improved your mind by reading a book or doing other useful things in between the garbage breaks!
As a retired projectionist used to pushing buttons on cue this well-perfected routine is quite easy, and I pride myself on having a completed tape where you can barely tell where the commersh was. I then am able to enjoy the movie at a later time free of all the impossible distractions.
Parts 1-8 of TAKEN are in the can and it's just about time to enjoy the show starting with Part One.
The only incomprehensible aspect of all this is how can ANYBODY follow or enjoy a movie with all the stoppages. I have never been able to do it, and I hate commercials because they are all constantly beating on me to buy a new car. Why should I? My car is 40 years old and runs perfectly.
[Memo to all you kiddies out there: if you don't smoke, and you don't drink, and you don't watch commercials, and you drive a car that's 40 years old as I do, you'll be AMAZED at what you can afford just out of the savings in petty cash!]
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