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View Poll Results: Do you prefer 16:9 or 2.39:1 movie viewing? | |||
16:9 |
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248 | 41.20% |
2.39:1 |
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354 | 58.80% |
Voters: 602. You may not vote on this poll |
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#42 | |
Site Manager
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![]() As dobyblue said, OAR = Original Aspect Ratio ![]() Super-35 camera image ![]() Many people confuse "OAR" with the ratio of the shooting camera, specially because it says "original" so they think that means the full area the camera "originally" exposed on the negative, no matter what was intended and composed for in the viewfinder by the cameraman/director of photography/cinematographer and the director of the film, and projected correctly on the movie theater screen by the projectionist. The word "original" comes from the days that home video realized that movies weren't all in 4:3 shape "originally" in the ancient years when they were projected when they were "born" ![]() I'd prefer myself something more along the lines of IR or IAR, or even OIR or OIAR! (Intended Ratio, Intended Aspect Ratio, Original Intended Ratio, Original Intended Aspect Ratio ![]() ![]() Then the confusion begins for all those Widescreen movies (All theatrical movies made after the mid '50s) shot in a "Standard ratio" sound and silent camera or VistaVision cameras, which have, respectively, 1.375, 1.333, and 1.500 aspect ratios, or aperture "holes". Most 1.85 movies are shot with 1.375 Academy sound cameras and very few have a 1.85 "hard matte" aperture plate inserted behind the lens to create a widescreen image directly exposed on the negative. The full 1.375 area is exposed, but the image is composed to be centered in a widescreen "invisible" area within the frame by looking though a viewfinder marked or masked properly for that purpose. A 1.85 movie image is the central 0.446" x 0.825' (11.33mm x 21mm) area of the Academy sound ratio's "original" 0.600" x 0.825' (15.25mm x 21mm) Projector Aperture which itself is inside the Academy sound Camera Aperture's 16mm x 22mm "hole". So if you saw a contact print made from the negative of Doctor Strangelove, or Muriel's Wedding, or Disney's Robin Hood, or Batman, you'll bound to see an image of 16mm x 22mm for most shots on it if you looked at it directly with your eyes, but you should just project, or scan, the 11.33mm x 21mm out of its center (or 12mm x 21mm for 1.75, or 12.66mm x 21mm for 1.66) depending on the format the film in question was intended to be seen. VistaVision movies were shot with a 35mm camera running the film horizontally so the negative area is 24mm x 36mm (Just like your 35mm still photo camera) that gives you a Camera Aperture ratio of 1.50, but those films were shot intended for 1.85 projection (Well, White Christmas, the first one, was supposed for 1.66) so its the same story as above. Just with a bigger, better negative! Nowadays many films are being made in the "Super-35" process, which isn't really new (Was SuperScope and Superscope235 before), which is the same thing as the 1.85 shot in Academy 1.375 sound cameras, but instead , with the Silent 1.33 cameras, which had a bigger "hole" of about 18mm x 24mm for their projected image. (Camera Aperture of approx. 18.75mm x 25mm). With these, "bigger negative" than sound, cameras, you can shoot 1.85 as 13mm x 24mm giving you a better original negative quality than 11.33 x 21mm (the 13 x 24 is reduced to 11.33 x 21 when the print is made) or 2.40 (or nowadays 2.39) by using the 10mm x 24mm central area (or 10mm x 23.9mm), or slightly off-centered vertically up (called 20/80 shooting) (so you don't end with lots of empty space above heads when you do the subsequent "open matte" "Full Frame" video transfer). 10mm x 24mm is not as good quality as 17.5mm x 21mm anamorphic Scope photography, but as mentioned before, gives other practical advantages, so it's become popular. As with the previous examples,, when shooting in Super-35 you expose the whole approx. 18.75 x 25mm* 1.33 area of the negative and only the central 13mm x 24mm (1.85) or 10mm x 23.9mm (2.39) part is intended, composed for, and projected. *It's actually more like 24.9mm and thats what a 4k or a 2k scan, scans across: The full 24.9mm Camera Aperture width. Now when "FullFrame" videos are made, they use all or most all of this extra area not intended nor seen in the "original theatrical presentation" ![]() For 4:3 videos, they'd use all of it, for 16:9 videos they'll partially crop vertically to a 16:9 width. Now second question ![]() Quote:
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#43 |
Member
Dec 2006
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DECIAZULADO...
Oh, I forgot to mention.... "Spider-Man 2" is in 1.78 on UMB (the PSP format), and it's NOT because the screen is so small, that they want to provide an image that FILLS the 5" diagonal 16x9 screen either. The 1.78 UMB disc version of "SM2" has SAME latteral info as the 2.40 WS DVD, but MORE vertical info. Now, there's LOTS of movies presented in 2.40 on the UMB format. So, WHY with "Spidey 2", is it in 1.78 on UMB, but 2.40 on widescreen DVD? Go figure, huh? |
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#44 |
Special Member
Jun 2006
Los Angeles,CA
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You can always get cinewide with autoscope on your runco projector to fix this problem.
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#45 |
Moderator
Jul 2004
Belgium
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Deciazulado, how long did you do over it to get all that knowledge...
![]() ![]() Nice reads mate, very informative. ![]() |
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#46 | |
Junior Member
Jan 2007
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Last edited by WilliamC; 01-23-2007 at 04:10 AM. |
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#47 |
Active Member
Jan 2007
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yes he was. same post even more or less. cut and pasting all around the 'net!
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#48 |
Moderator
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I presume the question is whether I want a 2.35/2.39:1 aspect ratio presented, or a pan & scan/matte open to full frame.
I'll take OAR all the way. We are going to have problems this generation. While the enthusiasts want accurate representation of the underlying film (OAR and transparency) it seems many people are complaining a lot if they don't get full frame and filtered to look the HD video. Incidently, myself and several other enthusiasts brought up anamoprhic and constant height encodings several years ago (elsewhere) and were resoundly booed by those that wanted the new formats to be tuned to their personal setup. Now that constant height setups are appearing, as I predicted, people NOW want the spec adjusted. Gary Last edited by dialog_gvf; 01-23-2007 at 09:47 AM. |
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#50 |
Senior Member
Sep 2005
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Is there ANYONE out there that would want Ben Hur cropped from its ultrawide format to 16:9? Can you imagine trying to view the great chariot race scene with a pan & scan? I don't even want to thing about such a travesty!
To badly paraphrase Patrick Henry... Give me OAR or give me nothing. |
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#51 | |
Power Member
Aug 2005
Sheffield, UK
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#52 | |||
Site Manager
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![]() That's what forums are for. Tibetan crash courses ![]() Quote:
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Too bad, Scope movies would have ended being the equivalent of about 930p in quality (930 x 2230 square pixels) and being displayed as 1080 x 2560 or better on some types of displays. But hopefully, due to the variable image quality of compression depending on bit-rate, if a Scope movie is allocated higher bitrates than an 1.85 movies the difference in pixelcount can be somewhat minimized and compensated for. After all, everything in the end is subject to signal vs noise ratio. OAR is always best. Tells the story the way it was designed, and therefore, tells it better. |
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#53 |
Banned
Dec 2006
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I am a 16:9 worshipper.
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#54 |
Senior Member
Sep 2006
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#55 |
Site Manager
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I was mission training with my Bond Girl and watching movies at night like Arthur et les Minimoys, Night at the Museum, Man cheng jin dai huang jin jia, Children of Men, My Litte Pony, and El laberinto del fauno in a huge screen at 1.5 PH (that's o.6x screen width-Scope/o.8x screen width-1.85 for you screenwidth measurers). Have to keep those eyes razor sharp. Like a Hawk.
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#56 |
Blu-ray Guru
May 2006
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![]() Last edited by theknub; 01-24-2007 at 06:25 PM. |
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#57 |
Junior Member
Jan 2007
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Yeh, I was pretty disappointed to see cheap ass wide screen. I figured that the new HDTV were built for the new Blu-ray/HD-DVD, I figured wrong. Why were the new tv's not built to proper specs, some kind of uniformity is needed. Some formatting is ridiculous, you get to the extra space in your perferal, but it is usually of no importance to the movie, meanwhile half the actors head is cut off. This has to be the stupidest. weirdest problem ever. Notice how Blu-ray preview disks at retailers fill the whole screen, they are simply scamers with cheap wide screen. If I wanted a smaller tv I would have bout one!
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#58 | |
Active Member
Aug 2006
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#60 | |
Junior Member
Jan 2007
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