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#2181 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I personally prefer the more flatter/square-ish ratios being a photographer and a student of cinematography myself. Composition wise, I prefer those formats than cinemascope. And I kind of dislike cinemascope because almost all films today are made in cinemascope. It's a personal thing, you can say. IMAX 1.44:1 still works at home because of the quality of detail and that vertigo in the image due to the wide framing and the shallow depth of field. I have seen a lot of IMAX documentaries on DVD in 1.33:1, which looked incredible. I don't get that immersion in the 1.78:1 versions because the framing feels "cropped" and it is cropped. |
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#2182 |
Banned
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I thought they used IMAX cameras for Games, Panavision 35MM for the on-games part of the movie.
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#2183 | |
Banned
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Scope is used more now because TVs are at 16x9 and directors want something that seems "cinematic" and not a high budget made for TV movie. Plus humans see more side to side than up & down. |
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#2184 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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And before people cry foul re: the cropping of such an image, the 1.90-formatted digital theatrical version is adjusted optimally and fully signed-off by the filmmakers so getting a 1.78 crop of that (or indeed just straight 1.90, see Doc Strange's 3D Blu-ray) isn't some majorly horrible violation of the original intent IMO. [edit le second] The immersive aspect by definition means that you can't take it all in at once which is why the framing of such material is often given so much headroom, e.g. Nolan's 1.44 works great in the cinema but it looks like open matte in the home, all empty space above and seeing more feet and legs below, so the 1.78 is actually a nice compromise between composition and immersiveness, although I still prefer the framing of the fixed widescreen extraction of his films. Catching Fire is the reverse, as although they shot the IMAX/4-perf spherical stuff with 2.40 frame lines they framed it up to take proper advantage of the 1.44 height, so much so that the fixed aspect version has to be tilt and scanned quite substantially to keep up with the action. Perhaps xbs on the previous page was right, they should include fixed 'scope, 1.78 and 1.44 versions on the Blu just to keep everybody happy. Lord knows I'd love to have a fixed 2.39 HD disc of Interstellar one of these days. ![]() Last edited by Geoff D; 03-27-2017 at 07:24 PM. Reason: added le quote |
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#2185 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Correct. But for certain action shots in the arena (like most of the stuff in or on the water) the IMAX cameras were just too big and bulky to use in that dynamic hand held kinda way so they shot spherical 4-perf instead. They talk about it in the 'making of' IIRC.
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Thanks given by: | GLaDOS (03-29-2017) |
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#2186 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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United Kingdom
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You and me both. Only reason I own the DVD's of TDKR and Interstellar is for fixed AR.
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#2187 | |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (03-27-2017) |
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#2188 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks Spike, I often have trouble distinguishing between using a long lens and a regulation stop and wider lenses shot wide open (which was done on Arrival and was indeed a focus puller's nightmare according to Bradford Young). But it still carries the aesthetic effect of isolating the subject in that large format-esque way, if only very superficially, and I don't think the increase in detail can be denied vs anamorphic and in particular the baffling modern trend for uber-grungy anamorphic. It's still plenty dark and Snydery to be sure, but there's so much more sharpness there than any of the anamorphic stuff seen in BvS or MoS, say. Maybe it's because I've been so starved of what 35mm sharpness can look like (even Deakins loves his digital these days) that I'm so taken with the trailer?
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#2189 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#2190 | |
Banned
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Warner Bros. and IMAX partner for ‘Justice League’ and ‘Aquaman’ VR experiences
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Thanks given by: | GLaDOS (03-29-2017) |
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#2193 | |
Active Member
Mar 2016
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Agree, Dunkirks trailer is so fuken clear compared to 35mm in past releases. Did Hateful Eight convince Nolan to move to 65mm?
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#2194 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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It certainly didn't hurt, that's for sure. And the rollout of refurbished 70mm projectors - even though not as widespread as first intended - for H8 clearly seems to have contributed to Warners putting out 70mm blow-ups for BvS, Fantastic Beasts and Kong, as well as what Nolan did with Interstellar.
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Thanks given by: | testmon1182 (03-30-2017) |
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#2195 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Would've been more preferable to shot with dual Alexa 65 if you want the best kind. Phantom 65 is an outdated camera. Nothing can beat IMAX 65mm but if digital's where they're heading, dual Alexa 65 is the answer. I think Transformers is using that, too? Even so, I won't go see that.
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Thanks given by: | GLaDOS (03-30-2017) |
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#2197 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
Jun 2007
Singapore
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There is Dual Strip 1570mm, but I highly doubt they'll use that. Phantom 65 Gold was a camera with two 65mm sensors for each eye, producing 4K resolution each. And I thought it looked great with Transformers: Age of Extinction. Most of the IMAX 3D Hollywood features out there are either shot with the Alexa 65 or Alexa IMAX and then converted, or just another camera. (Eg. Guardians of the Galaxy) Transformers: The Last Knight will be the first to use two Alexa 65, using a special camera rig. MI6 will most likely use a single Alexa 65 and then converted to 3D. But that's just my guess. |
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Thanks given by: | UFAlien (03-30-2017) |
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#2199 |
Blu-ray Prince
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I have a beef with Regal in how they choose which RPX auditoriums get the Dolby Atmos systems, predominantly they are 7.1, but a few nationwide have the full blown immersive Atmos systems. From a personal experience, I don't have any negative things to say about Regal's Kingstowne (Alexandria, Virginia) Atmos/3D/RPX system.
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#2200 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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