Question:
How can I play movies full screen on my HD TV?
Chelsa
2011-02-11 11:26:07 UTC
I want to watch movies through an HDMI connection from my laptop to my 52" TV. It works just fine, except I can't get the picture to be fullscreen. It only takes up a center portion on the TV.

I am currently using VLC media player, and setting it to "Double" and Fullscreen doesn't seem to help.

Any suggestions?
Four answers:
anonymous
2011-02-11 12:06:32 UTC
Movies are shot in widescreen ratio and are narrowed down to play on older tv's so if you're trying to watch a widescreen version you have to zoom in for full screen but you have limitations when doing this through your laptop and the video quality goes down when u use zoom.
kg7or
2011-02-11 14:17:10 UTC
Movies were not filmed in the 16:9 aspect ratio of your TV screen, so if you want a full screen image, something has to be compromised.



The bulk of older movies were filmed in a 4:3 ratio, the same as your old analog TV. No problem there. But showing the same movie on your widescreen set will ordinarily give you blank black areas on the two sides. You have 3 choices: (1) widen the picture, but that causes horizontal distortion. (2) zoom the picture, but that will cut off large portions of the top and bottom. Or, (3) leave it alone and watch the movie in the format that it was filmed and intended.



The same is true of movies originally filmed in various versions of wide screen. Cinemascope, for example, had a much wider aspect ratio than 16:9. With full screen on your TV, some of the left and right sides of the image is lost. You're better off just expanding it and tolerating the minor blank areas you see at the top and bottom.
anonymous
2016-11-29 12:21:20 UTC
2 issues ought to happen. the two the image for complete show screen is "stretched" horizontally (area to area) to greater healthful the extensive show screen (this would reason a sprint distortion whether that's no longer even substantial after a together as), or the image will look with black bars on the perimeters of the image (corresponding to "letterbox" on known 4:3 displays yet on the perimeters) purchase the widescreen in case you have a widescreen television yet what occurs on your subject incredibly relies upon on the television and the DVD settings.
Rajiv
2011-02-11 11:32:03 UTC
it has some limitation for full response use dvd player and use zoom as more as u wish.


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