This is the example of Bluray Angels and Demons seen with PowerDVD9 in Italian In the case of film Angels and Demons (Italian version) in the opening scene (from 3.54 to 4.40 minutes) is spoken French language losing part of the meaning of the scenes, this is a very important fact for the understanding of a film. This subtitle, other than permanent, turn on the actors speak a language other than the one selected, or when it is always a sign written in different languages. I feel terrible about the double post but I think I might have found the best solution:Click!įorced subtitles are those subtitles that appear when a scene requires it and then disappear. mkv file to another format and try to see if that would, either run smoother on VLC or work on the Media Player Classic. I was thinking though, if it tried what you did and I got the same results that you did, I was going to just convert the. I followed what you did, (setting the DirectShow video output to VMR9 (renderless)), and it worked! Nothing else worked, and I couldn’t find much else on the Internet about this issue. I had a very similar problem, but I have Windows Media Player Classic v6.4.9.0 and Vista 32bit.
I’ve tried these files on two different machines, with the same results.ĭoes anyone have any other suggestions, aside from giving up on these files? Thanks! Sadly, VLC runs very poorly for me, so I’d rather stick with MPC (which runs great, aside from this issue). I’ve tried playing the files in VLC Media Player, and the subtitles do, in fact, exist. And, of course, I’ve restarted MPC after accepting each of these changes, just to make sure. I’ve set Compatibility-> Autoload VSFilter to “Yes” under the Haali Media Splitter. I’ve tried all available options under Navigate->Subtitle Language. I’ve tried using the DirectVobSub and MPC internal subtitle renderers.
I’ve tried both VMR7 (renderless) and VMR9 (renderless) DirectShow video output (as well as every other output option, JIC). I’ve followed all the advice I can find, and after extensive Google searches on the topic, I’ve hit a brick wall. The files are MKV, with H264 encoding, Vorbis audio, and Advanced SubStation Alpha (ASS) embedded subtitles (that is, no separate subtitle file). Can someone help me out here? I’m having trouble getting embedded subtitles to display when viewing MKV files in the latest version of Media Player Classic (updated it last week).