By all means, ask Disney (and all film studios/dvd companies) to release their content in IAR (Intended aspect ratio hehehee) and in the best way posible (enhanced for 16:9, component RGB video transfers, etc.) Hopefully they will listen to their consumers.
But releasing open matte-shot widescreen in 4:3 is not so terrible. Horrible yes, but not so terribly one could say.
This is for Disneyboy since he sounds so frustrated.

(Cus I've also read his posts on the Darby and Family Band topics)
If you haven't read this site's aspect ratio info :
http://www.ultimatedisney.com/oar.htm
do so, and if you still need more info, hopefully this will ease your pain a little about Darby and Family Band for the time being
So brother, bear with me.
Theatrical presentations are projected (or have been projected) in three basic shapes (or aspect ratios).
I'll call them 1-square 2-wide 3-scope (wider)
Film cameras basically come in these three types, but a camera of one type can be used to shoot for the other by framing the composition of one shape inside the confines of the other.
The square type was the first one invented (or used), it's what's generally called 4:3 shape or 1.33 aspect ratio.
Actually this has varied over the years.
Silents were 1.33333 wide as tall, early sound (circa 1928-1931) was aproximately 1.21, and finally sound movies standarized into what's called the Academy Sound aperture, which is actually 1.375.
When TV was "invented" some years later they aparently didn't use this Academy updated ratio and adopted the old silent 1.33 ("4:3", 4 divided into 3) one.
Till recently all home display devices were this 4:3 shape.
In the 50's TV became important and movie studios decided to make film wider (bigger!) to have something that TV couldnt reproduce (and compete with)
To do this they:
A) use special lenses that shoot wider images and squeeze them into the square cameras (Scope, Panavision)
B) Compose and shoot for a "letterboxed" central section of the square camera's image (European, Disney, and USA widescreen)
C) Actually use wider film and cameras (70mm, VistaVision)
Disney films after the "changeover" (around 1955) mainly use B and fall under what I call the Wide shape, that is, between 1.66 and 1.85 wide. Let's call this 1.75 on average. Darby and Family Band belong to this category.
Since this type of film format uses a rectangular 1.75 wide central section inside the 1.375 square camera negative area for COMPOSITION , this is what we want to see on a DVD when we see a widescreen movie.
But in this 1.375 negative there's still image ABOVE and BELOW this central area that we want. And since most display devices still are 1.33 wide, when transfering to video on this type of film they transfer all this area, in a sense "opening up" the area above and below that wasn't meant to be seen, for the sake of easily putting a rectangular image into square display (hence the name "open matte"). You get all the theatrical image, but surrounded above and below with wasted non-essential empty image (lots of skies, ceilings and ground mostly) filling the remainder of the frame.
Or.. they can blot out this wasted space with black and you get a "letterboxed" Wide screen back.
Or they could blow up the central section so it fills the vertical space of the 4:3 display with the important composed-for-the-theater-image, but then they have to chop of the sides of the rectangle so it fits the narrower square shape and you loose a part of the theatrical image. This is called Pan and Scan. On this type of wide films you can loose up to 33% of the image if this is done.
Also, not all of the wide type (remember, around 1.75) films have the extra image area above and below in the negative, cus on some the cameraman put a blocking aperture plate in the camera to make the negative image forcefully be the 1.75 shape no way around it. These films MUST be pan/scanned obligatorily in 4:3 transfers. No open-matting for them! Those are called "hard-matted".
In recent years a new display shape has been made, the "16:9" one that is 1.7778 wide as tall. Now with this shape they can take the central COMPOSED FOR 1.75 section of the wide films and fill the frame of this display with no empty wasted space above and below, or lost, chopped-off sides.
(All this is relevant principally to type 2 ("wide") films. Scope type are another matter with more extreme results cus they are wider -2.20 to 2.75 wide-)
If Darby and Family Band are released "4:3" open matte, if you must have them widescreen, if you have a 4:3 display try blocking the top and bottom of the image, using carboard or custom made vertical blinds, or if you have a 16:9 display or a video projector, using the zoom function or a 16:9 shaped screen.
This may not always work perfectly, for the reasons mentioned on the Darby posts
http://www.ultimatedisney.com/forum/vie ... php?t=3994
As I mentioned on my post there, maybe one reason for the the release being 4:3 could be they currently don't have a widescreen master for health (film health) reasons. Or time = money?
16:9 enhanced masters have to be created from scratch, you know..
No, i'm not advocating 4:3 releases of widescreen movies, (It wastes bit rate, they are ambiguous to frame correctly, they loose resolution, and it's just plain WRONG) But if it's the only way you're gonna get to see your favorite movie...
And this is coming from someone who loves Widest films (original magnetic Cinemascope and UltraPanavision rule

) and thinks 16:9 displays aren't wide enough and letterboxed HDTV is not enough
(But i've kept Scope out of this post cus it' s already too long)
Hopefully enough people might complain and Disney change the release type before they're out, or actually surprise us and done them originally in 16:9 enhanced wide. :>. Otherwise do as i do with some of my DVDs and Laserdiscs and make a pseudo letterbox on them.
Upgrade when the HDTV widescreen blue-ray dvd comes out?
If this still makes no sense, read, lather, rinse, repeat.
It's all very confusing the first few times you try to phantom it all. DVD's , regions, PAL. NTSC, non square pixels, 4:3, enhanced, 16:9, anamorphic, widescreen, scope, hardened open mattes 1.66, 2.35, 2.40, 2.39, Academy not being really 1.33, 4:3 video not really being 1.33 neither (shhhh, don't ask), etc.
Still, it's good to be passionate about film. And Disney
Now, don't get me started with type 3- Scope...
