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ScruffyNerfHerder said:
Hey Harmy,
It sounds as if most Blu-ray authoring programs have a limit of eight audio tracks. I don't know if anyone has suggested this, but if you can't put every language on one disc, why not make a couple of customized, regional versions like Hollywood does?
You could create, say a "North American Edition" with:
- 5.1 DTS-HD-MA [English] (1977 70mm six track mix)
- 2.0 DTS-HD-MA [English] (1977 35mm stereo mix)
- 1.0 DTS-HD-MA [English] (1977 35mm mono mix)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [English] (1985 Laserdisc mix)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [English] (1993 Laserdisc mix)
- 1.0 Dolby Digital [Spanish] (1980 Latino dub)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [French] (1977 dub)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [English] (2004 DVD Audio Commentary)
And a "European Edition" with:
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [German] (1978 dub reconstruction)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [French] (1977 dub)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [Spanish] (1977 Castilian dub)
- 1.0 Dolby Digital [Portuguese] (1980s Brazilian dub)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [Italian] (1977 dub)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [Polish] (1995 Voiceover)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [Czech] (1992 dub)
- 2.0 Dolby Digital [Hungarian] (1984 dub)
Or something like that. A third version could have Japanese and the commentary tracks, etc. You could still include all the subtitle tracks on every version.
Releasing the Blu-ray this way would also make the file sizes smaller, as people won't have to download languages they don't speak.
I know this suggestion isn't exactly elegant, but I do hope it's helpful. =) As always, keep up the great work!
The original audio track should always be included as the default option. Do I seriously need to explain why?
Also, why is Spanish included in the NA version with French mysteriously absent? And what if, say, I want to grab the original audio track, because that's how I watch Star Wars, AND as a non-native English speaker I feel the need to have a shoddy European TV dub alongisde the original track for nostalgia reasons?
What if I'm crazy enough to feel the need to listen to the commentary, but I have the misfortune to not be Japanese and/or I want English audio as opposed to the Japanese dub? For that reason alone I'll have to download yet another version?
If you really want to split everything, the only sensible way would be to create a separate version for every language, basically. All English tracks plus the commentary tracks in every version, and on top of that a foreign language. That's if you really want to save space (because according to what you've written in your suggestion you in fact don't save any space since you're maximizing all eight slots). Or just every English track+commentary+whatever languages there's space left for.