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Originally posted by: Doctor M
Arnie: Laserdiscs are an interlaced source. You do NOT de-interlace when encoding to DVD afterwards. Therefore the answer is "nothing", Farsight would no doubt have not de-interlaced the movies (unless he didn't know what he was doing).
Arnie: Laserdiscs are an interlaced source. You do NOT de-interlace when encoding to DVD afterwards. Therefore the answer is "nothing", Farsight would no doubt have not de-interlaced the movies (unless he didn't know what he was doing).
This is incorrect. You want your final DVD to be a 24fps progressive source. This is what the actual film is, and what a retail DVD would be. It's also fairly simple to achieve with AVIsynth. The Laserdisc is 30fps interlace, which means 1/5th of the data is duplicates of other fields, and an interlace source will not compress well anyway.
Using AVIsynth, you deinterlace to give you 60fps, with 2/5ths of these being unique images. These are the real movie. Taking them, you have your 24fps film. If done carefully and properly, it will produce images practically identical (no blending or sync issues at all) to the original film before it was altered to make the laserdisc. You end up with a better image that will also compress better (preserving more image quality), and doesn't rely on hardware to deinterlace it (which can vary in quality).