Can anyone help me?

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MChang
Posts: 2
Joined: Thu Feb 05, 2026 2:43 pm

Can anyone help me?

Post by MChang »

I have downloaded a movie that has subtitles in it. English version has some Italian that is subitled on the DVD when you watch it. The download does not carry through the subtitles. Trying to figure out or learn how. Appreciate any help.

Brian
Woodstock
Posts: 10828
Joined: Sun Jul 24, 2011 11:21 pm

Re: Can anyone help me?

Post by Woodstock »

Cannot help with downloaded versions - this forum is supporting a program that rips video you own on DVD and Bluray, not downloads.
MChang
Posts: 2
Joined: Thu Feb 05, 2026 2:43 pm

Re: Can anyone help me?

Post by MChang »

Woodstock, Maybe I a misspeaking. it is a DVD I have that I am converting to digital format and then loading onto an external drive I have plugged into Roku so I can watch movies from the library I have created. I'm not very tech savy so probably download is the incorrect word choice.

Thanks brian
Woodstock
Posts: 10828
Joined: Sun Jul 24, 2011 11:21 pm

Re: Can anyone help me?

Post by Woodstock »

"Downloaded" typically refers to "finding a file online, and retrieving it."

Taking the file off of a disk you own is typically called "ripping it". This is something that MakeMKV does.

So, I'm guessing you mean ripping...

Subtitles can be a pain to deal with. Many older DVDs will have a single subtitle track, which may have "all text translated", "special text only", both mixed with some flags tossed in to separate them, and a few other things that most humans will question. Newer disks, especially Bluray, will (often) have two subtitle tracks per language in the audio tracks. My examples will be from Japanese disks, since that's what I normally deal with.

A DVD disk I recently ripped has two subtitle tracks, both in English. One is "just signs and titles" (i.e., "forced" subtitles), the other is "Everything". My usual settings for MakeMKV rip both into the MKV file, and they're selectable later.

The DVDs for Bleach, a Japanese series, have only one subtitle track, with no flags to separate out the Japanese signs from audio.

Other DVDs, such as one on the allied invasion of Normandy, has no separate subtitle track... yet has subtitles IN the video itself, only for important German or French dialog, so there is no way to really watch it if you need the English.

This is where knowing which movie or series you're dealing with will help with "how to fix this".
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