Bonus Info:
Deleted Scenes: Caps of the deleted scenes from the DVD!
Full Sized End: The credits-ending at full screen!
LS Fluff: A bunch of Lightning/Sally related scenes I capped extra stuff from before I decided to just cap the entire darn movie. All of them have folders with stupid, shippy names. %D;
SD caps work fine for icons/sigs/most graphical use. I may go back and do blu-rays eventually, but right now that simply isn’t doable with such a high amount of caps with a fair amount of haste. To me it makes sense to at least have SD available that focus on blu-ray, since SD is much faster for me to get my hands on (I only own DVDs sans WALL-E and only my laptop plays blurays)
Sorry if these aren’t good enough. I’m doing the best I can.
Yeah, I’d really like to HD everything someday. sighs and daydreams of a complete Blu-Ray library and fancy HD tv and cushy seats stuff that had nothing to do with getting the caps
Anyways, looking at the polls and what I’ve been feeling like watching lately, I think the next feature I’m gonna cap is Up. Feel free to keep voting if you haven’t, BTW.
In the mean time, have a Cars Toon! I always liked the look of this one.
Great screencaps, Net! It sure is nice of you to be doing this! I have the Cars bonus one on queue right now.
I’m not trying to criticize you in any way, because it’s really awesome for you to spend the time the do this monster project. But if you’d be willing to accept some tips, they might speed up the process and save you some time and space. First, I was wondering why you would upsize the caps to HD if they were SD to begin with. The pixel interpolation from uprezzing usually exacerbates motion blur, plus you would save a lot of computer space and processor strain.
This might help you the most: what you can do is stick the raw movie file into your favorite video editing program (Vegas, Premiere, FCP, etc.) and render as a JPEG sequence at 100% quality. This creates a new folder on your computer and dumps every single frame of the movie there as an individual, near lossless JPEG file. You’ll end up with about 200,000 files for an average length feature film. What you can then do is select the pics you want by thumbnail and delete everything you don’t want. Even better, because the files are number sequentially according to frame number, you could write a simple script (or download one off the interwebz) that would select every, say 20, frames and delete everything else.
The only reason why I know all of this is because I backup all the videos I film as image sequences. There’s other options to save as an image sequence, like PNGs, TIFFs, Targas, but I’ve found that JPEG seems to be the best compromise in quality, size, and render time.
Anyways, hope that helps! Again, I just want to say how awesome you are for doing this great project!
I’m not super technical, so I’ll admit a lot of that went over my head Ding, but I THINK what you’re saying is instead of doing the caps at my monitor size (yes my monitor is that huge. I’m not purposefully upsizing them. %D;), I should do them at their true 100% size, because that’s the best quality they’ll get even if its a bit smaller, right?
I’ve thought about that. The thing is, it’s easier for me to crop when I do full screen to start with, but I’ll look into if I my player will let me use the entire screen but make the video portion regular sized, because that is a good idea and would reduce DL size too. All that’s important is that I can get the video perfectly centered so Automator can crop things for me.
I’m… admittedly not so sure about the frame by frame idea, though. 10k caps is already enough for me to go through. 200k would take my computer days to process, even with all the Automator abuse, and that’s if it didn’t kill my hard drive from all the space used first. Man, I need to clean this poor thing’s HD out. It takes so much crud from me and keeps on ticking for 2 years day in and day out. It’s easier for me to just rewatch the movie and let my finger hit the cap shortcut constantly. Plus, rewatching the films is fun!
Sorry to DP so quickly, but I have a question for everybody pertaining to the point Ding made about true video size.
I put together a few caps from Up (Yes, I’m working on capping that now. Hooray!) and put together some comparison shots of the size they come out of my computer at, and resized to their true, original size. I’d like to know which set you prefer. Smaller and slightly better quality, or larger if a bit more blurry? Please take a look and tell me what you think ASAP. Thanks!
Not trying to steal your thunder or anything, but I just realized I probably could get my hands on a Blu-Ray copy of The Incredibles, and I was wondering if I could contribute to this awesome project because you said you don’t have a copy. I have the DVD too, but I think the Blu-Ray would be awesome for full HD epicness.
I’m really wanting to take these myself for consistency’s sake, but Incredibles is the film I’d have to visit the library and find. Lemme think on that.
My movie-watching muse is hiding from me. :< But I have more Cars Toons!
These shorts are so wonderfully messed up.
I capped the Cars Toons before figuring out how to cap at true size, so these are still the slightly bigger/slightly blurrier ones, but should suffice. I may go back and cap these again later.
Well, so much for getting all the caps done by now. Sorry this project died for a bit, but I plan to rush head first back into it!
Starting with…
…Oh man, I can’t believe myself.
27 Zips, 5.05 GB, [size=150]68,921 Caps.[/size]
A few items of note:
-VLC hates the DVD’s crappy encoding and may have missed a few shots. None were uber major but sorry all the same.
-I do not have the zips labled on mediafire, but if you are just wanting a specific scene, send me an ask and I can tell you which folder it’s in.
-This set may be replaced by a more thorough/HQ set in the future if I can get VLC and the DVD to make friends. If I do, I will try to upload it into the same folder so the link remains active.