West, check to make sure the aspect ratio is set up properly in your DVD player (widescreen as opposed to 4:3 or pan and scan). If the player and your projector are set up properly, you are doing nothing wrong. On a movie such as Fifth Element, fullscreen is heavily cropped and allows the image to fill a 4:3 screen. Since the widescreen side is shot in a 2:35 to 1 aspect ratio, you will always have bars on the top and bottom of the screen. Widescreen movies are shot in three different aspect ratios: 1:79 to 1, 1:85 to 1, and 2:35 to 1. While 1:79 and 1:85 will always fill a 16:9 screen, the 2:35 ratio will always leave bars on the top and the bottom. Directors often prefer this ratio for a more panoramic picture. Several widescreen movies are shot in this ratio, but there are plenty of DVDs available in the other two aspect ratios as well. The best advice is to follow Herman's last suggestion, ignore the bars on the top and bottom of the screen (you won't notice them after a few minutes of the movie have passed) and watch the movie as the director intended. Hope this helps.