Casino Royale 2006 (Bond 50) CE Bluray 1080p DTS-HD x264-Grym

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Added on September 24, 2015 by vonRichtin Movies > Highres Movies
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Casino Royale 2006 (Bond 50) CE Bluray 1080p DTS-HD x264-Grym (Size: 22.25 GB)
 Casino.Royale.2006.(Bond.50).CE.Bluray.1080p.DTS-HD.x264-Grym.mkv18.46 GB
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Description




Casino.Royale.2006.(Bond.50).CE.Bluray.1080p.DTS-HD.x264-Grym.mkv


Armed with a licence to kill, Secret Agent James Bond sets out on his first mission as 007 and must defeat a weapons dealer in a high stakes game of poker at Casino Royale, but things are not what they seem.


Director..........: Martin Campbell

Writers...........: Ian Fleming (Novel), Paul Haggis, Robert Wade &
Neal Purvis (Screenplay)

Starring..........: Daniel Craig, Eva Green, Judi Dench


iMDB URL..........: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0381061
SOURCE TYPE.......: Retail Blu-Ray 35,0 GB Movie @ 23920 kbps / 43,6 GB Full
ViDEO SPECS.......: x264 2PASS @ 14000+ Kbps (High@L4.1) - 23.976 fps
AUDiO SPECS 1.....: English DTS-HD Master 5.1 3887 kbps 48 kHz 24 bit
AUDiO SPECS 2.....: Commentary Producers Michael Wilson & Barbara Broccoli &
Production Crews
RUNTiME...........: 2h 24 min
MOViE CROPPED.....: No
FiLM ASPECT RATiO.: 2.35:1 Anamorphic Scope / Letterbox
RESOLUTiON........: 1920 X 1080p
EXTRAS............: Yes - 3,79 GB
SUBTiTLES.........: English, Croatian, Czech, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, Hindi, Thai,
Hungarian, Icelandic, Russian, Indonesian, Korean, Polish,
Chinese, Portuguese, Serbian, Slovenian, Turkish, German
SUBTiTLES EXTRAS..: German, Korean, Thai


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Grym's mkv's are encoded in 1920x1080 res. @ 2.35:1, 1.85:1, 1.66:1, 1.33:1 film aspect ratio. Just like a retail Blu-Ray is. This will NEVER change, so don't ask! Why is Grym's mkv's encoded this way? Read Number 2. Thanks.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------



1. Click link below for Guide to help setting up OS, MPC-HC & LAV Filters for
Bit Streaming to HD-Receiver & MAD VR, as well!


http://www.avsforum.com/foru...nced-mpc-hc-setup-guide.html

2. So how can I watch your not cropped x264 rip in the so-called 2.35:1
Anamorphic/Letterbox image, mate?


---

For starters we have Film Aspect Ratio = Letterbox, CinemaScope, PanaVision etc. =
2.35:1, 1.85:1, 1.66:1, 1.33:1 ect. Film Aspect Ratio is the ratio of the width
of the visible area of the video/film frame to the height of the visible area,
measuring from a 4:3 TV Display. All the Cinematic Aspect Ratios/Framings
mentioned just above apply to the HD resolutions 1080p (NOT 800p) and 720p (NOT
544p) and to the standard resolutions as well, being the DVD resolutions 720x576p
(PAL) & 640x480p (NTSC).

Then we have the "black bars". These areas are black to allow for better
contrast. The wrongly called "black bars" is in fact part of the image! So if any
part of the black unused areas is cropped/cut of the image then the original
aspect/scope/letterbox ratio is lost! That goes for all BD/DVD resolutions.

I know that a Blu-Ray player cannot playback anamorphic/letterbox material like
the DVD player can, but the anamorphic/letterbox/Framing/Aspect Ratio scope is
still in the transfer/encode, so for this to work you have to rip the Blu-Ray
disc to PC, and play it back anamorphic/letterbox from PC. Or you can grab one of
Grym's uncropped x264 rips and use that for anamorphic/letterbox playback from PC.

You can set a DVD player & also HD Box's to Display Aspect Ratio setting 4:3 and
receive correct aspect ratio/framing (Not all HD Box's apply). All the 16:9
setting in a DVD & Blu-Ray player or HD Box do, is to crop the image. That's it.

You can watch the movie in original 2.35:1 anamorphic/letterbox scope,
like you do in the theater, by setting the aspect ratio in your software player
to 2.35:1.

Example:

Open a 2.35:1 Grym mkv encode or retail BD 2.35:1 m2ts file in MPC-HC. Right
click in center of MPC-HC screen. Choose 'Video Frame'. Choose 'Override Aspect
Ratio'. Choose '235:100' (2.35:1). Display Aspect Ratio setting on your 16:9 flat
screen you set to 1:1 pixel mapping or whatever the name is on your telly. On my
own Pioneer Kuro LX5090H 16:9 flat TV it's called Dot by Dot. Now play mkv.

Ok, now try using same playback procedure with a cropped so-called "2.35:1"
1920x800 rip/file. 1920x800 cannot be 2.35:1 on a tv screen (Where it Counts),
because The Cinematic Aspect Ratios has nothing to do with Resolution! Aspect
Ratio is a Framing tool for images in the cinema business. So it's impossible to
get a correct 2.35:1 framed image on a correct set tv screen when the resolution
is cropped to 1920x800, because now the image has been manipulated to a 1.85:1
framing simply because part of the black areas are cropped of.

If you want to watch 1.85:1 aspect ratio movies in the correct aspect ratio
you then set the aspect ratio to 2.35:1 as well, and the image will have the
"small" black bars.

Cinematic Aspect Ratios on 16:9 flat TV: Display Aspect Ratio setting on TV set
to 1:1 pixel mapping and resolution is 1080p. Resolution could also be 720p, 480p
or 576p, the Framing/Aspect Ratio would be the same:

1.33:1 - Black bars on all sides of image (4:3) - Aka 1.37:1 Academy Standard
Image: http://someimage.com/rLrxESc

1.66:1 - Black bars on all sides of image (Small L+R) - Movies
Image: http://someimage.com/1ck9wcT

1.78:1 - Full screen. Image fills whole of screen (16:9) - HDTV & Home Video
Image: http://someimage.com/BqgDoMB

1.85:1 - Black bars Top & Bottom of image (Small) - Movies, HDTV & Home Video
Image: http://someimage.com/90ZxXoJ

2.35:1 - Black bars Top & Bottom of image (Big) - Aka 2.40:1 & Anamorphic Scope
Image: http://someimage.com/ll7hnDY

2.35:1 on a theater screen: http://someimage.com/aopL0DM

Links:

http://www.widescreen.org/index.shtml

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letterboxing_(filming)


(-G-)

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Casino Royale 2006 (Bond 50) CE Bluray 1080p DTS-HD x264-Grym

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All Comments

Run time is 144:34.
Thank you
Best Bond in my humble opinion, thank you!
I'm curious to see the extras too..
Ps. I know vonRicht that you are a perfectionist so I assume that part of the extras has screwed up AR originally on the BluRay, unfortunately..:(
No, the Aspect Ratio is not screwed up originally on the Blu-Ray disc.

The Aspect Ratio is always correct on the discs.

It's the default 16:9 cropping done from Blu-Ray Player, DVD Player, HD TV box, PC Software Players or whatever, that does the image manipulating.

If you want to get rid of the 16:9 cropping you can set your DVD Player to 4:3 in the Display Aspect Ratio menu in the player. You can do the same with HD TV Box's, but in my experience it's not all Box's that apply.

The Blu-Ray player cannot be set to 4:3 for playbacking High Definition content, because the Blu-Ray player is not designed to playback 2.35:1 anamorphich/letterbox images. It's designed to playback all 2.35:1 anamorphic/letterbox material in a 16:9 (1.78:1) cropped image.

The powers that be decided to go that way with the Blu-Ray player. And from the producers of entertainment and hardware it makes sense to draw up a standard that gives 16:9 - 1.78:1 full screen aspect ratio on your 16:9 flat screen, because even though I hate to watch my different aspect ratio movies in the mainstream 16:9 standard aspect ratio cropping I realize that most people (casual TV/movie viewers) do not like the black bars and want them gone.
I too agree it would be better if BD movies were not letterboxed because in the end the bars take up bits and every player is capable of playing movies with different aspect ratio. There is no reason in "pre-rendering" black bars if player can do it on a target system.
>>There is no reason in "pre-rendering" black bars if player can do it on a target system<<

But player cannot do that at present time, because the black bars are part of the image. The bars are there to give you the correct aspect ratio on your telly. But yes, in principal it would be fine by me. Just don't fuck up the image with cropping in the process, like it's done today!

Cropping means that the image is manipulated and out of it's correct filmed proportions, because cropping makes a zoom effect to get the full screen, and therefore objects get's out of the correct proportions and you get long faces on humans ect.

Also you loose the cinematic feel that bars give.

I just wish that everybody was included in the Blu-Ray design like it is with the DVD player and most HD TV Box's, so there was a alternate original aspect ratio image out put from Blu-Ray player. Hopefully they'll include it in the new 4K blu-ray players, but I highly doubt it. :)

Anyway, I can always rip discs to PC and play from there, as I do now.
I know the players do not actually add the bars to the movies they just fill the void with black where there would not be any image.
>>I know the players do not actually add the bars to the movies they just fill the void with black where there would not be any image.
Although I think that modern Bluray players leave the image alone and where there is no image (in the event of cropping during encoding) they just fill it out with black like MPC-HC.<<

This is false. I've never in my entire life seen a hardware or software player that can add bars or blackness. Or a TV taht can do it for thjat matter. I've heard this one a few times on the P2P Scene and it's completely wrong and it's completely false and if one is in the know about aspect ratio and hardware players one would know this cannot be.

Many here at the P2P Scene simply do not understand the basics of aspect ratio and how it works! Otherwise you wouldn't talk about players adding bars!
Thanks a lot vonRicht.
thnx
thanks VR for the upload
thank you so mach vonRicht

i'm Waiting a long time for this movie and "Quantum of Solace (2008)" from you