Apple Users
Related: About this forumI just received a DVD that is region 2
I'm in region 1. Is there any way to get it to play?

LiberalArkie
(17,467 posts)alfredo
(60,159 posts)I had to go to the site, neither sites were working.
I'm ripping it now. The preview is all munged up, but I will wait to see how the MP4 works.
LiberalArkie
(17,467 posts)alfredo
(60,159 posts)It's Talan with French subtitles, but the language of dance is universal. The movie: "Pina."
LiberalArkie
(17,467 posts)alfredo
(60,159 posts)Lydia Leftcoast
(48,219 posts)then you can use your Mac only for Region 2.
You can switch back and forth only 5 times, but if you keep it as Region 2, there shouldn't be any problem.
Also, if you plan to buy a lot of foreign DVDs, you can order an all-region DVD or Blu Ray player online. They cost about $20 more than a comparable Region 1 machine.
I order a lot of DVDs from European Amazon branches, so I've gotten a lot of use out of mine.
alfredo
(60,159 posts)It was a really good movie.
winstars
(4,255 posts)Like $79.00 or cheaper for just DVD, $150.00 for BlueRay...
alfredo
(60,159 posts)Lydia Leftcoast
(48,219 posts)Last edited Sun Feb 14, 2016, 03:43 PM - Edit history (1)
That is, it really doesn't care whether the DVD I put in is something I bought at Target or ordered from Amazon UK. It works exactly the same for both.
alfredo
(60,159 posts)They're cheap, but I like to let buying decisions marinate for a bit.
Lydia Leftcoast
(48,219 posts)A real all-region player should be marked Regions 0-6 for DVDs and A,B,C for Blu-Rays. Some are "all region" for DVDs only, and the regions do not necessarily overlap.