Re: Question for Wide Screen Buffs
Its not "basically the same as widescreen"!! 4x3 is chopped up! You are seeing more if you are watching a DVD filmed in 1:78, 1:85 or 2:35 even if you see black bars on your tv.
A long time ago, movie houses thought that no one would go to the movies now since television came along so they, along with Hollywood, devised a way of filming that would revolutionize the way we saw film. This is where the term Panavision came about, lets make the movie experience different from what they see on tv. Lets make it wider. Films made in widescreen had to be formatted to fit a square 4x3 tv to be shown on network tv so editors had to blow up the image and cut the sides off so that it would fit, thus, we have the "this film has been formatted to your tv" messaage you see on tv and VHS tapes. The movie you see has been cut to fit the square screen.
If you compare a movie "formatted" versus a widescreen movie with black bars, you will see more side image with widescreen than with cropped. A good example would be the movie "Unforgiven" with Clint Eastwood, on the tv "cropped" version you see him speaking to a hooker and you see part of her face, on the widescreen version, you see him, all of her face, and a mountain range behind her. YOU ARE SEEING EXACTLY WHAT THE DIRECTOR INTENDED FOR YOU TO SEE, HOW THE MOVIE WAS FILMED!! In order to get that image to a 4x3 aspect ratio television set, they had to cut the sides off, do you understand??
Jesus Christ man, research this or you'll be lost with the coming of HDTV.