I'm Stumped - Language Issue
Posted: Sat Aug 14, 2021 4:11 pm
Hello to all. I am a long time user of makeMKV and have had no issues related to this awesome program itself. Any issues I have experienced ultimately had to do with the optical disk or drive. But this current issue has me stumped. Reaching out in this way is a last resort as I have spent a considerable amount of time trying to figure this out myself with no joy.
I obtained a region "B" Blu-ray disk which is labeled "AUDIO: ENGLISH 5.1 DTS-HD MASTER AUDIO". The BD was processed without issue, Handbrake was used to create a MP4 file.
I have always used the default settings in makeMKV and have found this to work fine.
Upon playing back the MP4 I found that the language spoken appears to be Norwegian which is not that odd since the movie was produced in Norway. I later discovered this on Wikipedia; "Dead Snow 2: Red vs Dead was shot in both English and Norwegian at the same time." Frankly I'm not certain what this means. So I thought that Norwegian is the default language and I needed to select the English track in the playback program. As only one audio track is selected in Handbrake I went back to the .mkv file and selected the English master audio track in Potplayer. (I did the same when I tried playback in VLC).
No joy, the language did not change in spite of the fact that English is clearly shown as being selected. Ok, I thought that I would process the disk again and only check the English track and leave any other language out. I was surprised to see that there is no audio track other than English shown.
So how is it that when there is no evidence that there is a Norwegian track it is the only language that is possible to use when playing the file?
I have checked all relevant settings in both Pot Player, VLC and made sure the language preference in makeMKV is set to English. This same result is observed when playing the disk back directly using a software player. Could it be that because this disk is region "B"? You can process the disk and play it back but language control is not available?
I'm stumped.
M
PS I can provide more information like the burn log file and screen shots showing settings but I didn't want to clutter this up without knowing if this would be relevant.
I obtained a region "B" Blu-ray disk which is labeled "AUDIO: ENGLISH 5.1 DTS-HD MASTER AUDIO". The BD was processed without issue, Handbrake was used to create a MP4 file.
I have always used the default settings in makeMKV and have found this to work fine.
Upon playing back the MP4 I found that the language spoken appears to be Norwegian which is not that odd since the movie was produced in Norway. I later discovered this on Wikipedia; "Dead Snow 2: Red vs Dead was shot in both English and Norwegian at the same time." Frankly I'm not certain what this means. So I thought that Norwegian is the default language and I needed to select the English track in the playback program. As only one audio track is selected in Handbrake I went back to the .mkv file and selected the English master audio track in Potplayer. (I did the same when I tried playback in VLC).
No joy, the language did not change in spite of the fact that English is clearly shown as being selected. Ok, I thought that I would process the disk again and only check the English track and leave any other language out. I was surprised to see that there is no audio track other than English shown.
So how is it that when there is no evidence that there is a Norwegian track it is the only language that is possible to use when playing the file?
I have checked all relevant settings in both Pot Player, VLC and made sure the language preference in makeMKV is set to English. This same result is observed when playing the disk back directly using a software player. Could it be that because this disk is region "B"? You can process the disk and play it back but language control is not available?
I'm stumped.
M
PS I can provide more information like the burn log file and screen shots showing settings but I didn't want to clutter this up without knowing if this would be relevant.