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Old 02-14-2017, 03:15 AM   #21
bedlamfeuder94 bedlamfeuder94 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KINGDANGER View Post
I love CinemaScope. It has such an epic feel to it, even on a TV. What's more, I've become a big fan of shifting aspect ratios and hope to see the technique used more in the future.
Really? For me, it can be somewhat disruptive. As much as I loved the IMAX sequences of The Dark Knight, it made me wish for a "more complete" picture than in only several sequences. I agree about the epic feel to it though, I'm watching Dead Man's Chest as I type and it works great in this aspect ratio.
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Old 02-14-2017, 03:56 AM   #22
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glorious 2.55 framing! - yes, yes please (wish more films were shot this way)

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Old 02-14-2017, 03:58 AM   #23
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Both of the theaters in my town have motorized curtains on the sides of the screens that change shape depending on if you're watching a 1.66/1.85 movie or a scope movie, is that commonplace or was that just Carmike being fancy?
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Old 02-14-2017, 04:00 AM   #24
Dubstar Dubstar is offline
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Originally Posted by shinobipopcorn View Post
Both of the theaters in my town have motorized screens that change shape depending on if you're watching a 1.66/1.85 movie or a scope movie, is that commonplace or was that just Carmike being fancy?
that's the way it should be horizontal or vertical masking ... both AMC and Regal are being cheap now and installing set 1.85 AR 'floating' screens in their newer cineplexes, thus any scope film now is letterboxed.
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Old 02-14-2017, 04:06 AM   #25
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It is my least favorite flavor of Scope.
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Old 02-14-2017, 04:11 AM   #26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dubstar View Post
that's the way it should be horizontal or vertical masking ... both AMC and Regal are being cheap now and installing set 1.85 AR 'floating' screens in their newer cineplexes, thus any scope film now is letterboxed.
Guess I lucked out... Carmike just built a 11 screen + 1 Big D right before the AMC deal went through to replace our dilapidated 1970s 7 screen, and the other 8 screen that was built in the 90s just happened to have them too (but it's used as a second run dollar theater right now, and we don't know if AMC is going to let them keep doing that).
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Old 02-14-2017, 04:21 AM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dubstar View Post
that's the way it should be horizontal or vertical masking ... both AMC and Regal are being cheap now and installing set 1.85 AR 'floating' screens in their newer cineplexes, thus any scope film now is letterboxed.
It's been quite common for decades for theaters to lack masking curtains. I think most of the theaters I went to in the mid-70s to early-80s (my heaviest era of movie going) lacked them.
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Old 02-14-2017, 04:22 AM   #28
Michael24 Michael24 is online now
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I've always preferred Scope out of all the aspect ratios. Just makes movies feel more epic.

Quote:
Originally Posted by shinobipopcorn View Post
Both of the theaters in my town have motorized curtains on the sides of the screens that change shape depending on if you're watching a 1.66/1.85 movie or a scope movie, is that commonplace or was that just Carmike being fancy?
Both our Regal theaters do that, and I think one other theater but I've only been there once (a little over two years ago) and can't remember for sure.
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Old 02-14-2017, 04:39 AM   #29
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The point of watching a movie isn't to fill your screen.
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Old 02-14-2017, 04:53 AM   #30
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I prefer the look of the Cinemascope film. I think it just adds that more Epic feel/look to the movies. I had wished Avengers was in Scope like most of the Marvel series of films beforehand, but got it for Age of Ultron. Plus they were so much easier to make up film wise when i was a projectionist and still working with 35mm prints. Plus i have a projector at home and so it doesn't bother me with the black bars being present on my screen. Wish more of the Scope 3D films would take advantage of the film breaking like Ghostbusters did (and hopefully for the upcoming Fantastic Beats if they use the IMAX print)
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Old 02-14-2017, 04:53 AM   #31
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Quote:
Originally Posted by motorheadache95 View Post
Alright this came out longer-winded then I thought when I started writing it, but here it is:

You gotta remember that movies are still shot for the theater, and many theaters still equip themselves with a wider scope-screen for presentations of those films.

But the other thing is that aspect-ratio is as much a part of the aesthetic presentation of the movie as the cameras used, the color-grading, and the cinematography. It's all based on how the director wants shots to look and how he wants people to feel when watching the film. And at this point its pretty much engrained in our culture that the wider scope looks and feels more "cinematic," which I'm sure is also one of the reasons filmmakers still like using the ratio. Even some TV shows now don't follow the 16:9 standard in order to give their show a more cinematic quality.

But I get why the question is asked-- I know a lot of people will just give people shit for even bringing it up, but I think its worth addressing, especially for newcomers who aren't cinephiles or enthusiasts. I mean, movies have a short theatrical run and afterwards are forever watched on a TV, right? Why not just adopt a 16:9 standard and be done with it?

Well, using that logic, all movies prior to the rise of HDTV should have been conformed to an even narrower 4:3 standard--like they should have never changed the Academy-ratio for films so people could continue to watch any movie on TV with the proper framing. Except that now that would mean all films prior to, say, 2006 would be pillar-boxed on a modern TV.

And finally think about the future-- maybe we won't even have standard TVs 20 years from now. It could be all VR, or holographic projection, or you paint the screen on your wall, who knows? And maybe those images can be wider, and 16:9 isn't a standard screen anymore. Then it would seem silly to have conformed everything to fit your current home box.
Good post, but you forgot to mention one very pertinent point, cinema-scope only exists because of 4X3 tv's. It was something the theater could offer that your little box at home could not.

What would be some great funny irony is if the theaters went back to 4X3 now that TV's are 16X9! I doubt it will happen, cuz 2.35 or wider makes movies feel bigger and better when shot proper, even with bars at home.
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Old 02-14-2017, 05:36 AM   #32
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I like to watch all of my movies in glorious Technicolor... breathtaking Cinemascope... and Stereophooonic Sound!
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Old 02-14-2017, 05:48 AM   #33
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I love movies with all different aspect ratios from 1.2:1 through 2.75:1. I watch tons of 1.33/1.37 films, lots of standard widescreen at 1.66, 1.78 or 1.85, a few Superscope movies at 2:1 and lots of CinemaScope at 2.4 and 2.55. Now and then there's a 2.75 film or two. But black bars on the top and bottom or on the sides are a non-issue when using a projector, as others have already noted. My screen height is a constant four feet, and I just pull the side masking in or out to fit the image, and zoom the projector if it's wider than a 1.78 ratio to fill the width of the screen up to 10 feet maximum. When I have people over (or even when I don't) I love to start out a program with a cartoon or short that is Academy ratio, and then while the disc for the feature is loading I click on the zoom preset for 1.85 or Scope and go up to pull out the masking. People who have never been over before are always impressed at the screen suddenly being so much wider.

I enjoy multiple-aspect ratio films (like ENCHANTED or GALAXY QUEST) that keep a standard height, windowboxing the 1.33 or 1.85 parts within the normal scope height, so the picture gets wider on its own for the Scope portions without overflowing the screen height on any of the ratios. What I hate are Blu-ray versions of films like HUNGER GAMES 2 or INTERSTELLAR that are mostly in Scope and partly in IMAX, which forces me to watch the entire movie in 16x9 with the Scope portions letterboxed and the IMAX portions filling the height. If I could suddenly make the screen taller for those sections and zoom back, it would be different.

As far as motorized masking goes, I wish I could afford it for my home theatre (maybe someday), and if Carmike installed it they must have been really splurging. Our theatres have moveable masking but the manager or a doorman must pull it in or out manually to fit whatever movie is on that screen. Sometimes they forget and there's either blank screen on the sides or there's picture flowing over on to the masking. It's a big pain when two films with different aspect ratios share the same screen at different showtimes.
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Old 02-14-2017, 06:37 AM   #34
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I'm a huge fan of cinematography, and photography is a hobby of mine. Sometimes I watch movies just for the cinematography and music, and not the story, such as The Keep.

I watched The Devils (1971) last night, and the movie just wouldn't look as amazing as it does if it was filmed spherical. I love the atmosphere of that movie, especially the church sequences, with the candles burning in the background. The anamorphic bokeh makes them look amazing.

There is something about old lenses from the '70s that aren't replicated these days. It is cool that some directors, like Tarantino and Gareth Edwards are utilizing these old lenses for their movies.
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Old 02-14-2017, 11:24 AM   #35
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Wouldn't it be cool if they built TV's that allowed you to change the shape of the screen to fit movie ratios instead of the other way around?
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Old 02-14-2017, 11:51 AM   #36
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bedlamfeuder94 View Post
So here's something that has always bugged me as a Blu-ray collector/cinephile - why, with today's TVs, do we bother filming in CinemaScope?

It's a matter of aspect ratio for me. I'd like to see all my movies fill the entire screen without using a "partial zoom" or "fit to screen" mode on the TV, since that cuts off part of the movie filmed. As good as that might look on a movie showing on TV, I don't like knowing what I might be missing on the zoomed-in picture. I can live with those black-barred aspect ratios, but I prefer not seeing them.

Interested to hear what you all have to say about it.
Because movies - for now - are still made for cinema exhibition.

End of. Get over it.
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Old 02-14-2017, 12:02 PM   #37
benricci benricci is offline
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Originally Posted by bedlamfeuder94 View Post
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinephilia

Just the formal term for being movie buffs/collectors/whatever you look at it as
I don't think he was asking for a definition of cinephile. I think he was pointing out you are not one, based upon your original post.
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Old 02-14-2017, 12:47 PM   #38
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bedlamfeuder94 View Post
So here's something that has always bugged me as a Blu-ray collector/cinephile - why, with today's TVs, do we bother filming in CinemaScope?

It's a matter of aspect ratio for me. I'd like to see all my movies fill the entire screen without using a "partial zoom" or "fit to screen" mode on the TV, since that cuts off part of the movie filmed. As good as that might look on a movie showing on TV, I don't like knowing what I might be missing on the zoomed-in picture. I can live with those black-barred aspect ratios, but I prefer not seeing them.

Interested to hear what you all have to say about it.
I can't comprehend anyone with a home cinema system could see it any other way. Unless you've got 20 ft tall screen in your home and are chagrined at not being able to impress your wife and kids with an image that reaches from that floor to that ceiling.

Non-optimal display use is a fair compromise for optimal image display. This is why most theatres are not stupid enough to blow up no scope movies to the scope ratio in order to "fill" their screen (if they still have a scope screen).
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Old 02-14-2017, 01:02 PM   #39
baheidstu baheidstu is offline
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This entire thread is just the same tired old full-screen vs. widescreen argument that's been going on for decades re-framed (no pun intended) for the HDTV era. I can't see how anyone can start a thread like this with statements such as those in the OP and not except blowback. It took years for people and companies years to come around to the fact that when it comes to films OAR is best, yet we still get people griping that they don't like seeing black bars and wanting to zoom in to fill their screen. You can only educate people and provide so much information before you just want to throw up your hands and scream "I give up".
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Old 02-14-2017, 02:09 PM   #40
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dubstar View Post
glorious 2.55 framing! - yes, yes please (wish more films were shot this way)

Yes, I was very pleased/surprised to see La La Land shot this way.
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