So, you've got a 16:9 widescreen TV, and are going to watch a modern 2.35:1 film on it.
Do you:
a) Let the frame just touch the sides of the screen, so that you have black bars top and bottom.
b) stretch the image so that it's out of proportion but fills the screen
c) zoom it so that the height of the screen is filled but you lose a little from the sides of the frame
d) as c, but allow a little bit of compression width wise to minimise the amount lost.
e) zoom a little so you reduce the black bars a bit, but not entirely, and keep most of the frame width.
I'm a (d) person myself... I don't mind losing a little bit off the edges, and I don't mind if the people look slightly taller than they should (at most I compress by 10% which I don't find noticeable), but I'll be damned if I'm paying for pixels that are just gonna sit there black and unused.
How do you watch yours?
Do you:
a) Let the frame just touch the sides of the screen, so that you have black bars top and bottom.
b) stretch the image so that it's out of proportion but fills the screen
c) zoom it so that the height of the screen is filled but you lose a little from the sides of the frame
d) as c, but allow a little bit of compression width wise to minimise the amount lost.
e) zoom a little so you reduce the black bars a bit, but not entirely, and keep most of the frame width.
I'm a (d) person myself... I don't mind losing a little bit off the edges, and I don't mind if the people look slightly taller than they should (at most I compress by 10% which I don't find noticeable), but I'll be damned if I'm paying for pixels that are just gonna sit there black and unused.

How do you watch yours?
