


So this would mean non-progressive DVD players are 60hz, right? And the DVD has flags telling the player to do 2:3 pulldown.
#Imango dvd ripper movie
I’m not sure, but I think what’s happening is that during the telecine process, the 24fps movie is slowed down to 23.976fps, and then it’s split up into fields, achieving 47.952 fields per second, and this video file is what’s put on the DVD. Now, when MPEG Streamclip is telling me the movies are 23.976, does this mean it’s just telling me the frame of the video file before it was actually put on the DVD? Is it really 29.97fps (or 59.94 fields per second) and the 23.976 is just info about the video before put on a DVD? Or is the actual movie file 23.976 on the DVD and the DVD has flags that tell a DVD player to split the film into fields, which would be 47.952 fields per second (23.976 x 2), and then it also has flags to tell the player to do 2-3 pulldown? And that all NTSC DVDs are 480i and are displayed at 29.97 fps. But I also read some articles that said movies put on DVD aren’t actually 23.976 fps but are really interlaced into separate fields. I looked at the frame rates of several of my my movie DVDs (originally 24fps movies) in MPEG Streamclip and it said all of them were 23.976 fps. Also, I’ve been reading different articles about this subject and now I’m not so sure what’s going on.
