pro-bassoonist wrote:
Second, this new argument about the additional 'space'/windowboxing practice really should not be a point that you address with the aspect ratio at all because in the very first post I left with the photos of Minerva's DVD release I own I said: "Some very minor adjustments could have been made, but as far as I am concerned Raro's Blu-ray release is nowhere even close to being a disaster.". As it was an issue during the DVD era, overscanning is very much a non-factor now and one can easily adjust for it. In other words, there is no need for all the drama that you wish to attach to it.
These are two separate discussions, which I feel I've successfully kept separate. If you want to bring it back around to the aspect ratio, that's fine, but I see no problem with debating this issues separately. For the record, one cannot adjust for overscanning without losing resolution. Which wasn't such an issue in the DVD era since resolution wasn't exactly the selling point with that format. With Blu-ray, it is.
pro-bassoonist wrote:
Third, a pretty good number of Blue Underground's Blu-ray releases of Italian films still use window-boxed transfers. I have not seen any outrage there. I've also seen a few other European releases that could easily be placed in the same group. But regardless, as far as I am concerned it is not a serious issue because even a lot of modern TV sets can compensate for overscanning.
That's not windowboxing, it's simply missing information. You can see this by comparing the BU and Arrow versions of Zombie. Windowboxing is supposed to preserve more image info, not remove it. Criterion's Harakiri suffers from the same problem, and many people here recommended the MoC disc over it because it did not have this missing space.
pro-bassoonist wrote:
To sum it all up, your initial question was about the aspect ratio of the film, not the extra 'space', which was addressed. You have not really offered one valid counter argument explaining why Raro, Criterion, Arrow Academy, and all the other parties that have had their hands on this film got it 'wrong' by respecting the aspect ratio of the Minerva resto.
If the aspect ratio is 1.66:1, then obviously it's Minerva that have got it wrong. Even if Raro, Criterion or Arrow were aware that it should be widescreen, I doubt they'd even be allowed to manipulate the transfer provided to them from Minerva to such a degree. So I'm not trying to hold them accountable. I'm simply trying to establish some facts. Neither of us have really brought hard evidence to the table; you have suggested it is 1.37:1 because Adriano Apra says so, and because historically you've always seen it that way. I have suggested it is 1.66:1 because RAH has historically always seen it that way, that as far as we know Rossellini was working in widescreen at the time, and that it appears to matte fine to 1.66:1 in comparison to Rossellini's earlier, undoubtedly 1.37:1 films.
Hopefully something more concrete can be uncovered.