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How To Rip a Blu-Ray Movie with Just One Click

The MakeMKV utility decrypts and rips a Blu-Ray disc with just one click, preserving the original video quality of the source file.


Handbrake and AnyDVD lets you effortlessly rip DVD movies, but Blu-Ray discs have typically been a bit trickier. In addition to needing a Blu-Ray drive (obviously), you had to use a combination of AnyDVD HD (to decrypt the disc), RipBot264 (for transcoding the MPEG4 AVC video format), and tsMuxeR (to mux audio and video files). Not anymore. The newest version of the MakeMKV utility streamlines the entire process into one click. The 3.5MB program, which is available for both Windows and Mac OS, will decrypt and rip your Blu-Ray disc to a MKV file that contains whatever video and audio streams you want. It'll also package selected subtitles tracks into the file, though it won't hard embed Forced subtitles onto the video. 
 

Download MakeMKV ( alt link), install it, and launch the program. With a Blu-Ray disc in your drive, click the big Open Disc button. MakeMKV will decrypt the disc and show you a list of video tracks. Select the largest one (usually the one with the most chapters) and check the audio and subtitle tracks you want to include in the rip. The other video tracks are for menus and special features. Finally, click the Make MKV button to start the ripping process.

In our test, MakeMKV took only 23 minutes to rip a 90 minute movie. It's this fast because the utility doesn't transcode the video to a lower bitrate or resolution--the outputted MKV file is the same quality and size as what was on the disc. The speed at which it rips limited by the speed of your Blu-Ray drive. But that also means you'll need plenty of disc space to store these files (about 20GB per movie) unless you plan on transcoding them to 720p afterward. Handbrake accepts MKV container files as a video source, and we'll let you know how well it works for transcoding these rips. MakeMKV also isn't a process hog, since it's not doing any transcoding, but you will need a relatively powerful PC to play 40Mbps 1080p files with VLC or Media Player Classic. 
 
The current MakeMKV build is the 1.5.2 BETA, which is a free download. Blu-Ray ripping is free on a trial basis for 30 days, and the full version of MakeMKV is $50. Considering that a 1-year license of AnyDVD HD is $85, this isn't a bad deal at all.
Binman88on March 23, 2010 at 12:46 p.m.
Thanks for the info, I didn't realise it was so easy to rip Blu-Rays. I'm considering buying a separate terabyte hard drive to dedicate solely to Blu-Ray and DVD rips.
will staff on March 23, 2010 at 12:58 p.m.
@Binman88: It wasn't so easy until, well, yesterday. The files are still going to be very large, but it's one step closer to the promised land.
chimpchimpon March 23, 2010 at 1:29 p.m.
I tried this out yesterday after Lifehacker posted it. It wouldn't work with one of my movies but it did a nice rip of another one. Handbrake took forever to transcode the mkv down to a smaller size, but maybe my rig just isn't beefy enough.
Rallier moderator on March 23, 2010 at 1:57 p.m.
What filesize would such a MKV blu-ray rip be?
coonce staff on March 23, 2010 at 2:37 p.m.
is this windows only or is this possible on a mac? do any of the new macs have blu-ray drives?
Monkeyman04on March 23, 2010 at 2:52 p.m.
@coonce:  "The 3.5MB program, which is available for both Windows and Mac OS" 
Binman88on March 23, 2010 at 3:18 p.m.
@Rallier said:
" What filesize would such a MKV blu-ray rip be? "
Norman is spot on in the article above. He said about 20 gig for a 90 minute movie; I just ripped Baraka which is 92 minutes long, and it resulted in a 20.1GB file.
 
@will said:
" @Binman88: It wasn't so easy until, well, yesterday. The files are still going to be very large, but it's one step closer to the promised land. "
I can live with the file size, if there's no way to convert them without losing quality. Someone now needs to talk me out of buying a new hard drive to keep them on! Unfortunately I'm in an impulse-buying mood: I just bought two Zippo lighters online for the hell of it, and I rarely smoke.
HypoXenophobiaon March 23, 2010 at 3:21 p.m.
While I don't want to knock a person for ripping a blu-ray, doesn't the cost outweigh it's use? 20 gigs is quite a bit of space.
Monkeyman04on March 23, 2010 at 3:27 p.m.
I'll just wait for the compression to get better. 20gigs is just too much at the moment(for me).
SPACETURTLEon March 23, 2010 at 3:36 p.m.
wow, 30 minutes... thats pretty quick, aint it?
Rallier moderator on March 23, 2010 at 3:36 p.m.
@Binman88: I guess 20 gig is doable, well it is still a lot but that are 25 movies on one 500gb drive.
will staff on March 23, 2010 at 3:41 p.m.
@coonce: You can get third-party Blu-ray drives that are Mac compatible, but I don't think you can actually play the movies on Mac.
Binman88on March 23, 2010 at 3:42 p.m.
@Rallier:  The fact that they rip pretty quickly means you won't feel too bad if you have to free up space by deleting some anyway.
Newtenon March 23, 2010 at 3:55 p.m.
Oh hell yes I was waiting for this, and no loss in quality at all? That's what I like to hear. Thanks guys!
Snailon March 23, 2010 at 4:28 p.m.
This is a great piece of software. Thanks a ton!
ethan staff on March 23, 2010 at 5:38 p.m.
@Monkeyman04 said:
" @coonce:  "The 3.5MB program, which is available for both Windows and Mac OS"  "
Yeah coonce read!
bervaon March 23, 2010 at 6:45 p.m.
Good stuff, thanks for the info!
JeffreyGeeon March 23, 2010 at 7:38 p.m.
Hey! All Mac's need now are Blu-Ray drives...YAY for Sony!!!
Th3_Jameson March 25, 2010 at 4:53 a.m.
I don't really have too many BD's yet. I have had a blu-ray player since 06 and just own Planet Earth, Dark Night, 300, and a few others. 
dubios451on March 25, 2010 at 8:03 a.m.
Every movie pictured in the article link is awesome except for V for Vendetta, that makes me hate whoever owns that pile.
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