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Anamorphically squeezed material to letterboxed- How good is AE at this?
I’m about to go to my film lab for the transfer of some super 16mm stuff from my new short film. I have the option of getting a letterboxed version, or an anamorphically squeezed version.
Apparently the reason some people choose letterboxed over anamorphic for super 16mm transfers is that unsqueezing the material to a letterboxed version is a task many NLEs, including FCP, do poorly. Apparently you end up with artifacts and some other weird issues, like losing every 4th line of resolution. Thus I was advised to do a letterboxed transfer if my movie would be seen in mostly from 4:3 media such as Beta SP tapes to avoid these issues, and only to do anamorphically squeezed transfers if I was sure I’d end on on DVD more often than not.
Then I was told that After Effects does a pretty much flawless letterboxed version from anamorphicly squeezed material and thus an anamorphic transfer makes more sense. I have no experience with this myself and do not not currently own AE to try it out. But I was hoping someone here would have some insight or experience in this regard.
So thank you ahead of time for any help!