

SubsMarine will search on all the languages you pick. Then, click the Languages tab, and drag your preferred language(s) into the boxes. Photo: Cult of Macįirst, open SubsMarine’s preferences (Command-comma, or SubsMarine>Preferences… in the menu bar). Setting up SubsMarine This is how I have mine set up.
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Once you’ve set things up, SubsMarine may be the easiest way to get subtitles for your movies and TV shows. The subtitles will be downloaded and renamed, depending on your preferences. Then, you just check the boxes of the subs you want, and click Download.
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Click on the Find Subtitles button and it will search across all your chosen services (check the ones you want to use in the preferences) and list the results: The results list Photo: Cult of Mac Depending on how you have the app configured, it should scan a preset folder whenever you launch the app, and list the movies and TV shows it finds there. Photo: Cult of MacĪbove you see the main SubsMarine window. Downloading subtitles with SubsMarine Subsmarine searchs for subtitles so you don’t have to. It’s all very straightforward, so let’s take a look. The app then returns a list of subtitles, and lets you pick which ones you want to download.
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It scans the Movies folder on your computer, detects any movie files, and then searches for subtitles using several of the above-listed services. SubsMarine is a $6.00 app from developer Cocoawithchurros. But we’re going to ignore all of these websites and look at an app instead. They’ll all get the job done, subtitle-finding wise. These have interfaces of varying annoyance and difficulty, and some have deliberately confusing links that trick you into clicking things you don’t want to click. The mains sites for subtitles are SubScene, Open Subtitles, Podnapisi, and Betaseries. TV show subtitles are usually available mere hours after the show broadcasts, so if you’re in the habit of downloading ripped TV shows, you won’t have to wait. These sites let you search for subtitles based on language, and for TV shows you can also specify the season and episode number. You can search for them in your preferred search engine, but better is to look at one of the main aggregation services.
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There are lots of sources for subtitles on the internet, and almost all subtitles are created for free by enthusiastic movie-lovers. this is handy when you have a bunch of subs for a TV show, but you aren’t sure which one syncs up properly. srt file on top of the movies player to load it, and you can also cycle through the available subtitles by tapping the S key. All you need to do is to make sure those files are in the same folder as the video itself, and they will be added automatically. Any good video player will spot these files and associate them with the main video file, and will allow you to flip between the various options in the app.Īpps that support subtitles like this are the ever-great VLC, the RSS-and-BitTorrent-supporting Miro, and the super-handy iFlicks. You may also have several files, primer.en.srt,, , and so on. Subtitle file names can also include their language, so that primer.en.srt means that it is in English. For example, if you have a movie called Primer.mkv, then your subtitle file should be named primer.srt. Most Mac video players will automatically load any subtitle that are in the same folder as the movie file, and that have the same name as that movie file. Video playing apps with subtitle-support The iOS Videos app has great support for subtitles.
