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#21 | |||
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The time issue was also a big deal early on, on films like "Apollo 13" and "Star Wars: Episode 1." That problem has been resolved with modifications to the projection systems and IMAX films no longer have the absurd length requirements they initially did. |
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#22 | ||
Blu-ray Champion
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I really hope TDK IMAX blows records, and that Batman's Still Beginning will be allowed to be shot 100% IMAX. |
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#23 |
Member
Jan 2008
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Only parts of TDK were shot in imax. Not the whole film.
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#24 | |
Active Member
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#25 |
Blu-ray Guru
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If the second new-Batman film was filmed like the first, there will be no Super35 negative to allow anyone to mess with the aspect ratio. Batman Begins was shot with anamorphic lenses on standard 35mm stock, and has no "extra" top and bottom picture. Both the negatives and release prints had only one AR (2.39:1). The IMAX version of BB was "letterboxed" within the IMAX frame.
There are valid artistic reasons to shoot with anamorphic lenses versus spherical. In medium and close shots there is a very shallow field of focus, which allows the director to focus only on what he wants you to look at, with everything else in the background soft. Directors Christopher Nolan and John Carpenter shoot almost exclusively in anamorphic. |
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#26 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Nobody even shoots feature films in 65mm anymore, much less IMAX. The theatrical run is just a commercial for the home video sales. Every feature film you see in IMAX is a blow-up from a 35mm or digital source. The cameras are far too unwieldy, the lens selection too limited, and the film stock too expensive for anything other than short documentary features. In fact, IMAX's large negative size even makes it impractical for shooting special effects plates. 65mm or Vistavision (yes, the cameras still exist) is occasionally used for this, but generally Super35 is the format of choice for such chores.
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#27 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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I accept your points on the difficulties of IMAX. I would welcome 65mm photography as well ![]() Vistavision is an excellent format. |
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#28 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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The 4/6 scenes shot in IMAX are intended to be viewed in an IMAX aspect ratio (1.44:1), with the rest of the film being shot (Super35 I'm guessing?) with the intention of framing it at 2.35:1, which is the aspect ratio of the 35mm release prints. This essentially means that both versions will have compromised aspect ratios in at least some shots. The IMAX version will contain much more top & bottom space than was intended for much of the movie, while the 35mm version will be cropped for those IMAX action scenes. Unless of course the DP is simply composing everything for 2.35:1 (even the IMAX stuff), but is making sure the rest of the frame is a "safe area" (no boom mikes, dolly tracks, etc. on the exposed negative). Even the best camera operator will have a hell of a time making sure both aspect ratios look good when shooting a scene. But I guess this (multiple intended aspect ratios) is the wave of the future. |
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#29 |
Site Manager
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Movies shot in Super 35 cameras can have a 1.33 height...this wouldn't be any different. Compose for 2.39, protect for 1.44. If the IMAX scenes are not letterboxed to 1.78 or 2.39, etc, in the IMAX projection in the first place, as 2.39 movies are.
Even if shown in 2.39, the negative would be 30 mm x 70mm, a 9x improvement over Super 35, or almost 6x from anamorphic Panavision. What's the aspect ratio of the preview on the disc? |
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#30 |
Senior Member
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??? i think we are thinking of 2 different things. i was just saying imax film is 70mm. for instance 2001: A Space Odyssey was filmed with 70mm. Which I really think they should show in the IMAX.
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#31 |
Site Manager
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The IMAX format is 70mm film run "sideways" (sprockets at the top and bottom of the image), so the image is about 48.5 mm tall x 70 mm wide. Normal 70mm film is run "vertically" (sprockets at the sides of the image), so the image is about 22 mm tall by 48.5 mm wide.
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#32 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() Last edited by Penton-Man; 07-01-2008 at 10:46 PM. |
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#33 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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^
I believe this is the first time anyone has ever used IMAX (MSM camera ~ 100 lb.) in a dramatic feature film for a major. |
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#35 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#37 | ||
Power Member
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You're still on board with my *ahem*plans*ahem* regarding the destruction... er, forced obsolescence of Super35 film for film production use, right Wicky? |
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#38 | ||||
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Tony Scott's whole "The lenses were too heavy to fit on the planes in Top Gun". That's what VistaVision is for ! ![]() |
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#39 |
Power Member
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To make it easier to understand think of the differences like this:
One standard 5-perf 65mm film frame is 250% larger than a full 4-perf 35mm film frame. One single IMAX 15-perf 65mm film frame is equal to 3 frames of standard 5/65mm film (such as what was used to photograph movies like Lawrence of Arabia, 2001 and Tron. One IMAX frame is 750% larger than a full 4-perf 35mm film frame. Also consider the fact many "Super35" movies are using little more than half the negative of a 4-perf 35mm frame. Movies shot in 1.85:1 ratio crop away a good bit of the 4/35 negative as well. So the descriptions of IMAX film frames being 9 or more times larger than many 35mm movie frames is valid. |
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#40 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I saw Transformers on the Imax screen, yeah I know one of those guy's right.
![]() Because the Imax screen has an aspect ratio of approximatly 1:34:1. So to keep the Dark Knight in its oar it will have black bars top and bottom. |
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