Originally posted by: Darth Editous
Subtitles are stored as four-colour full screen images, so they should always appear in the same place on all players, which in this case will be bad if the subs are outside the 16:9 frame and people want to zoom to fill their wide screens (some TVs have a "subtitle" zoom for exactly this situation).
The best use of this facility I've seen was on the Ghostbusters DVD. There's a subtitle track which takes the form of an MST3K-style silhouette of the people doing the commentary
DE
They're soft subtitles. The exact position can differ from player to player.
Subtitles are stored as four-colour full screen images, so they should always appear in the same place on all players, which in this case will be bad if the subs are outside the 16:9 frame and people want to zoom to fill their wide screens (some TVs have a "subtitle" zoom for exactly this situation).
The best use of this facility I've seen was on the Ghostbusters DVD. There's a subtitle track which takes the form of an MST3K-style silhouette of the people doing the commentary

DE
The same subtitle track can have both 16:9 and 4:3 images. It depends on the settings of your dvd player and/or your tv/beamer where they will appear on the screen.