I've tried the 'subtitle' options on my remote during the abovementioned portions, but to no avail.
What am I missing here?
![Crying or Very sad :cry:](./images/smilies/icon_cry.gif)
Here's a screen-shot of my original disc in MakeMkv, with all the appropriate tracks & titles checked, exactly as I prepped to create the original mkv (did it twice, as a matter of fact, to make sure I didn't miss anything:Woodstock wrote:It is possible that the "forced" subtitles are not tagged as forced. There are a LOT of BDs out there that use a separate track for forced subtitles, rather than tagging individual subtitles as "forced" or "not forced" within a single subtitle track. The majority of BDs I've processed are that way. And some even have director/actor commentary as an additional track.
When you look at the data for each track on the BD (assuming you try the "Open" rather than "Backup" option), how many English subtitle tracks are shown for the movie?
I used the WDTV profile to rerip it to mkv but still no subsChetwood wrote:It's also possible your Oppo does not support (unzipped) PGS subs. Try the WDTV profile to see if it makes a difference.
Woodstock wrote:There ARE workarounds.
The "easiest" is if the title ships with a DVD as well as the BD. You can use tools like MKVToolix to merge the subtitle tracks from a rip of the DVD with the video, audio, and chapter tracks from the BD, in place of the BD's subtitle tracks. They won't look quite as good, but... you can also run the result through tools like Handbrake to generate an MP4 file with switchable subtitles.
Handbrake (available from handbrake.fr) can read the PGS subtitles and "burn them in" to the video, when it creates an MP4 file. You can't switch them on and off if you do that, though.
Thanks for the replies but I already have the DVD and BD versions of the Godfather trilogy...just wanted to have the convenience of streaming the blu-ray MKVs to my Oppo. But sacrificing quality for lower-res MP4s isn't an option for me. Not a big deal, though; even with my foreign films; the Oppo 105 upconverts even oldish SD DVDs beautifully, almost as good as BD!Romansh wrote:Get a dedicated media player (WD TV, Popcorn Hour, Mede8er) or an HTPC.
Why lower-res? Noone is forcing you to encode to anything lower than full HD with Handbrake.rajmahid wrote:But sacrificing quality for lower-res MP4s isn't an option for me.
Any screenshot comparisons to back that up?rajmahid wrote:I actually tried the WD and it...well, it sucked.
Other options:rajmahid wrote:It's all about convenience
You could post a Mediainfo output of 1 file that works and of 1 that doesn't. Or better yet: extract those 2 subs with MKVextractGUI or MKVcleaver, zip them up and post them to sendspace.com or something so we can have a look.danitim77 wrote:Pls let me know if you guys found any solutions to this. Is it a way to edit the subtitle (maybe change the format to a format supported by oppo) after you have ripped the MKV file ???
Which is apparently what Oppo managed to convince it's customers of. Good or them.danitim77 wrote:To use another player si out of question as nothing come close to the video quality of the Oppo ...