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When I export the film to a film strip file to be used in Photoshop, the frames stay at 720x480, but the actual movie image shrinks so that it is directly in the middle of the 720x480 frame. What gives? Is there any other way to fix this or any other way to capture the 84 frames I need to capture for the scene on the Falcon following Alderaan's distruction?
So it has a black border all the way around, not just top and bottom? Does it stay at a "stretched" 16:9 ratio? The "active" area of each frame should be about 720x360, so that leaves about 60 pixels of black on the top and bottom.
I know I mentioned it before, but I use VirtualDub-MPEG2 - first, to open the ripped M2V, then to save out an image sequence of the frames I need to edit. Then I can load that sequence back into VirtualDub, editing frames as individual files and previewing them on the fly. Then I use VirtualDub to save out an AVI which I later encode to MPEG2.
This is the saber I'm using. Disagree with the way it looks if you want, but it is IDENTICAL to Anakin's saber in multiple scenes in ROTS.
So it has a black border all the way around, not just top and bottom? Does it stay at a "stretched" 16:9 ratio? The "active" area of each frame should be about 720x360, so that leaves about 60 pixels of black on the top and bottom.
I know I mentioned it before, but I use VirtualDub-MPEG2 - first, to open the ripped M2V, then to save out an image sequence of the frames I need to edit. Then I can load that sequence back into VirtualDub, editing frames as individual files and previewing them on the fly. Then I use VirtualDub to save out an AVI which I later encode to MPEG2.
This is the saber I'm using. Disagree with the way it looks if you want, but it is IDENTICAL to Anakin's saber in multiple scenes in ROTS.
What are you using as your reference? Not disagreeing - the ROTS sabres did seem more solid and less nebulous than ever before.
DE