The old school way to do this was with a camera with a special 'TV' shutter 
designed to eliminate sync problems. They were used to create kinescopes, the 
only one I ever used was made by Auricon.

As, Phil notes, though, the effect of rephotography is different with an LCD 
display than it is with a CDT TV. So it might indeed work without any special 
equipment. But I for one am not sure, so if other folks can't confirm that it's 
that easy...

The rolling bars are a function of the FPS mismatch not a video-to-film thing. 
So, if you have (or can can borrow) a video camera or DSLR that shoots 24fps, 
you can do tests with that. If the video doesn't roll, film at the same speed 
won't roll. 

Noter also, that if you play your DVD on your computer, you'e not seeing the 
the exact video format from the disc (especially the frame rate), but rather 
that info remapped to fit the settings of your computer display, including the 
refresh rate. Depending on the type of monitor you have, you may have a choice 
of refresh rates (60Hz, 70Hz, 75Hz etc.) in the video settings (typically you 
have more choices here with a VGA connection than with DVI). If you can do 
tests with a video camera, you can try different refresh rates and see if it 
makes any difference.
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