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Anamorphic Widescreen?
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Frequently Asked Questions

Do you own all of these movies?
No. Most of the movies I review here have been rented from Netflix, or are borrowed from friends. I won't buy a DVD unless I feel I will watch it more than three times. I figure, if I can watch it three times, it's probably good enough to watch over and over again.

How do you rate movies?
When I rate a movie, what you see is purely my opinion, based on my own personal tastes. I am not a trained film critic, and I have never studied filmmaking.

How do you rate video quality?
When I rate the video quality of a DVD, I am looking for a clean picture, good color, and no compression artifacts. I do take into consideration the age of the film (and if it has been restored), as film stock from the 60's were not as good as what is available to movie companies today. Also, I favor anamorphic widescreen transfers. I will not give a letterboxed (non-anamorphic) widescreen transfer of a film more than a rating of "3" no matter how good it looks. I will not take points off for a DVD not being widescreen if the original source was also not widescreen. A rating of "2" denotes "average", and is not a negative rating.

How do you rate audio?
When I rate audio, I am looking for clear, clean sound with a full frequency range. Again, the age of the movie is taken into account, as recording technology from the past is inferior to what is available now. For movies with surround sound, I'm looking for a full soundstage to set the scene, the mood, the music, whatever, throughout entire movie rather than surround sound that is used only for special effects.

How do you rate special features?
If a disc has commentary and trailers (and that's it), or filmographies and trailers (and that's it), I will give it a "2". Any less than that will get a "1". If a disc has no special features on it whatsoever, it gets a "0", and no, "chapter selection" is not a special feature! Anything above and beyond "average" is rated based on quality of content, originality and thoroughness -- how much effort did the studio put into producing these extra features, and are they worthwhile to watch?

Why don't you list the subtitles and other languages?
The DVD's being reviewed are all Region 1 encoded, and the intended audience for this site is the US and Canada, under the assumption that everyone reading this site can understand English. As such, I only make note of audio tracks in other languages when English is not the original language of the movie, and in such a case, I will list the various languages available on the disc. For the same reason I do not list all of the languages of subtitles available, as I assume that any DVD of a foreign language film released in America will have English subtitles if it does not have an English soundtrack available.

What is "Anamorphic Widescreen"?
I havent made that part of my site yet. Until that happens, you can click the link in the upper left of your screen to find out.

Why does your "Studio" listing say "Warner Brothers" when this movie was made by MGM?
The "Studio" listing for each DVD I review refers to the studio that released the DVD, which is not necessarily the same studio that produced the actual film. This happens especially frequently with older MGM movies because in the 90's, Ted Turner bought the rights for the entire MGM film film library. Since then, Time Warner has bought out Ted Turner, and thus today, AOL Time Warner now owns all of those old MGM movies. I decided to do things this way because this is a DVD review site, not a movie review site.

 

If your question was not answered here, feel free to send an email to Bryan.