You have just gone up a lot in my estimation. So few people like / acknowledge this series... And I'm a sucker for anything cute (add Princess Tutu to this list).Garylisk wrote:Ninja Cadets
Little Snow Fairy Sugar
Hana Yori Dango
Flame of Recca
Just to name a few off the top of my head
Overlooked Anime's for Videos
- Savia
- Chocolate teapot
- Joined: Wed Apr 02, 2003 3:40 pm
- Location: Reading, UK
"A creator needs only one enthusiast to justify him." - Man Ray
"Restrictions breed creativity." - Mark Rosewater
A Freudian slip is where you say one thing, but mean your mother.
"Restrictions breed creativity." - Mark Rosewater
A Freudian slip is where you say one thing, but mean your mother.
- SarahtheBoring
- Joined: Sun Apr 07, 2002 11:45 am
- Location: PA, USA
- Contact:
As for renting, there is a store near my workplace that rents DVDs. But I doubted I could rent, watch several times (for the audio), rip, and return a DVD's worth of video in one night.
Gotta sleep, you know.
That is a good idea overall, though. Maybe if you're near a store that has five-day rentals.
Gotta sleep, you know.

That is a good idea overall, though. Maybe if you're near a store that has five-day rentals.

- FurryCurry
- Joined: Sun Jul 14, 2002 8:41 pm
Just to expand this latest line of thought, DVD Decryptor lets you make Region-Free, decrypted ISO images of discs.
Combine this with a program like Isobuster or somesuch, that lets you mount images on your HD as a virtual drive, or look inside the image to copy files out of it, and you could rip the disc in less than an hour, and watch it, and/or copy the vobs out of it to a folder for use in a project at your leisure.
I haven't tried all these steps, but I have made ISO's of region 2 DVDs and burned them to DVD-R to watch them in my set-top player, and that works great.
Combine this with a program like Isobuster or somesuch, that lets you mount images on your HD as a virtual drive, or look inside the image to copy files out of it, and you could rip the disc in less than an hour, and watch it, and/or copy the vobs out of it to a folder for use in a project at your leisure.
I haven't tried all these steps, but I have made ISO's of region 2 DVDs and burned them to DVD-R to watch them in my set-top player, and that works great.
My Eyes Are The Victim's Eyes.
My Hands Are The Assailant's Hands.
My Hands Are The Assailant's Hands.
- Ashyukun
- Medicinal Leech
- Joined: Wed Sep 04, 2002 12:53 pm
- Location: KY
- Contact:
Personally, I think the online rental-by-mail places are the best for this type of thing. Netflix isn't bad... has a decent selection- but GreenCine just completely blows their selection away. They have to have like 95% of all domestically released anime DVDs...
Bob 'Ash' Babcock
Electric Leech Productions
Electric Leech Productions
- SarahtheBoring
- Joined: Sun Apr 07, 2002 11:45 am
- Location: PA, USA
- Contact:
- MindBug
- Joined: Sun Jun 01, 2003 1:49 pm
- Location: Madison, Wisconsin
- Contact:
Another good method for doing that, is to download the program "SmartRipper". Just load the DVD into your DVD drive, and then in the program options you can select which VOB files you want to pull from the disc. [Under "Files"] That is also good for ripping a menu, or other cool spot of a DVD extra's you like. [Takes me about 25 min to rip an average DVD on a 12X creative DVD drive]
Load the VOB's into "DVD2AVI" and do the "Save Project" option to output a *.d2v file. [About 7 - 15 min - Depending on the DVD] You can load that *.D2V file into TMPGEnc and then clip out what parts of the video you want. This is how I get the majority of my source footage. You can use the DVD [NTSC] profile in TMPGEnc to output high DVD quality mpeg clips. This can be loaded into premiere easily and still retain almost all the quality of the source footage. This is just another idea you could play around with. ;)
Those times are what it takes on my Dell:
Pentium Xeon 2.2 Ghz Duel Processor [only 1 right now]
512 MB Ram
Windows 2000 Pro
-MindBug-
Load the VOB's into "DVD2AVI" and do the "Save Project" option to output a *.d2v file. [About 7 - 15 min - Depending on the DVD] You can load that *.D2V file into TMPGEnc and then clip out what parts of the video you want. This is how I get the majority of my source footage. You can use the DVD [NTSC] profile in TMPGEnc to output high DVD quality mpeg clips. This can be loaded into premiere easily and still retain almost all the quality of the source footage. This is just another idea you could play around with. ;)
Those times are what it takes on my Dell:
Pentium Xeon 2.2 Ghz Duel Processor [only 1 right now]
512 MB Ram
Windows 2000 Pro
-MindBug-
Where's Your Head At?
- AbsoluteDestiny
- Joined: Wed Aug 15, 2001 1:56 pm
- Location: Oxford, UK
- Contact:
That's a total waste of time when there are programs such as mpeg2cut which can extract mpeg2 clips without any recompression.MindBug wrote:Another good method for doing that, is to download the program "SmartRipper". Just load the DVD into your DVD drive, and then in the program options you can select which VOB files you want to pull from the disc. [Under "Files"] That is also good for ripping a menu, or other cool spot of a DVD extra's you like. [Takes me about 25 min to rip an average DVD on a 12X creative DVD drive]
Load the VOB's into "DVD2AVI" and do the "Save Project" option to output a *.d2v file. [About 7 - 15 min - Depending on the DVD] You can load that *.D2V file into TMPGEnc and then clip out what parts of the video you want. This is how I get the majority of my source footage. You can use the DVD [NTSC] profile in TMPGEnc to output high DVD quality mpeg clips. This can be loaded into premiere easily and still retain almost all the quality of the source footage. This is just another idea you could play around with.
Those times are what it takes on my Dell:
Pentium Xeon 2.2 Ghz Duel Processor [only 1 right now]
512 MB Ram
Windows 2000 Pro
-MindBug-
- MindBug
- Joined: Sun Jun 01, 2003 1:49 pm
- Location: Madison, Wisconsin
- Contact:
- SarahtheBoring
- Joined: Sun Apr 07, 2002 11:45 am
- Location: PA, USA
- Contact:
- MindBug
- Joined: Sun Jun 01, 2003 1:49 pm
- Location: Madison, Wisconsin
- Contact: