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https://thepiratebay.se/torrent/8658052/...ublicHD%5D i watched film and agree the results of case are missing ! it seems someone gave the answer to where to get correct subs but that comment has gone fron tpb im guessing user was banned ...so please help where do i get the subs to fix the end of this ? ##@1h43 is where he writes to epa is that where the commenter means ? at what time in the movie is he refering to ?
#@1h49.23 results are on screen but thats not all the info you get if you watch the film on tv...im sure there should be more info
Due to this error I got a 2nd copy of the film,,A Civil Action[1998]DVDrip[Eng]AC3[5.1]-Atlas47 , tpb25may2010 1.37gb this copy of A civil action is 1h50.06 in total , at the 1h41.56 mark there are hard coded subtitles on screen explaining the result of the case thats at 1h46.16 on the copy its missing from.. A.Civil.Action.1998.720p.WEB-DL.H264-HDCLUB aol.. tpb8jul13 3.59gb so the subs file I found 2nd fixes the missing hardocded subs problem explaining the ruling in the case , so use a civil action .srt subs file from say 1hour46 into the film..if these .srt subtitles dont work on your tv using a media player watch that part of the film on a pc as vlc player can play these subtitles , the 1st subtitle says judge skinner found that...
2nd subtitle says w.r grace was...
3rd subtitle says faced with the prospect of.., after that you can turn the subtitles off I believe.
I dont know why the 2 different copied of the film are nearly 5 minutes in length different ! , and why would such important hardcoded subtitles be missing from the A.Civil.Action.1998.720p.WEB-DL.H264-HDCLUB aol.. tpb8jul13 3.59gb copy ?
(Nov 06, 2013, 13:44 pm)zeitgeistman Wrote: [ -> ]I dont know why the 2 different copied of the film are nearly 5 minutes in length different !
Just to answer this point..
The time difference is mostly explained by what's known as PAL speedup.
Modern film (true film) is recorded at 24 frames per second. PAL DVDs display at 25 fps so they run faster; 4% faster.
In this case a "film" that runs 1 hour 50 minutes (6600 seconds) runs to 1 hour 54 minutes and 40 seconds (6864 seconds) if displayed at 25 frames per second:
6600 x 1.04 (4% PAL speedup) = 6864
The DVD rip (atlas47) is from a PAL DVD. It displays 25 frames per second.
The Web Download displays 23.976 frames per second, so it lasts a little longer.
yummy
Also, subtitle timings can be easily fixed using the visual synchronization feature in
subtitle edit. An awesome sub tool.
(Nov 06, 2013, 15:21 pm)gcjm Wrote: [ -> ]In this case a "film" that runs 1 hour 50 minutes (6600 seconds) runs to 1 hour 54 minutes and 40 seconds (6864 seconds) if displayed at 25 frames per second:
6600 x 1.04 (4% PAL speedup) = 6864
you got it the other way around.
6600 x 0.96 (4% PAL speedup) = 6336
faster means less time for the same number of frames, not more time.
(Nov 06, 2013, 15:54 pm)bob5695 Wrote: [ -> ]you got it the other way around.
Exactly.
And I just knew you would pick up on it.
Maybe it was a deliberate mistake, or maybe it was the three hours sleep.
@bob5695 and @gcjm thats over my head ! i dont get it , if were shows 25 frames per sec or 50fps thats still a second its just weve seen better quality, i dont get how it makes a films run time longer, my head will probably explode like scanners if i try to understand it !
the film has a given number of frames. the slower they run, the longer it takes.