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Topic : "Film Format" |
Matt Elder member
Member # Joined: 15 Jan 2000 Posts: 641 Location: Sydney, NSW, Australia
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 5:57 am |
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Does anyone know why film format (ie the ratio) is the way it is today? I am aware that a number of years ago, there were a couple of competing formats and in the end it was a compromise between the two.
But why did film initially go for such a wide landscape format. A visual art before this was painting and people had been using a rectangle somewhere in between a square and a double square. Ok there were exceptions (large altarpieces, ceiling frescos etc) but what was the initial attraction to the wide landscape format? _________________ See ya on da flip side
Matt
http://www.mattelder.com |
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Ian Jones member
Member # Joined: 01 Oct 2001 Posts: 1114 Location: Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 6:10 am |
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heh, I've got a silly idea... if a screen is wider, you can make the cinema wider. You know that means more seats = more ppl = more money. Well it works in theory. lol.
I like the widescreen, it just looks nice imo. |
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jfrancis member
Member # Joined: 08 Aug 2003 Posts: 443 Location: Los Angeles
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 7:38 am |
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The vistas of the great outdoors, back when sunlight was the main movie light source?
The need to have more than one person on screen at a time? |
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Impaler member
Member # Joined: 02 Dec 1999 Posts: 1560 Location: Albuquerque.NewMexico.USA
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 2:28 pm |
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Once again, the great Cecil Adams delivers the straight dope.
http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a1_366c.html
The short answer? 70mm film stock looked cleaner and sharper than 35mm. Rather than continually replace movie theatres to match advances in film, they stuck with the spacious screen format, much to the chagrin of VHS owners everywhere. _________________ QED, sort of. |
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jfrancis member
Member # Joined: 08 Aug 2003 Posts: 443 Location: Los Angeles
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 3:19 pm |
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yes, but film was never taller than it was wide, even when first invented. It was always "landscape" -- not "portrait" -- I think it might have been square, at most, early on, but it was never vertical |
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Matt Elder member
Member # Joined: 15 Jan 2000 Posts: 641 Location: Sydney, NSW, Australia
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 3:59 pm |
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Thanks for that guys. The article you mentioned Impaler only talks about the rise during the 1950s. This is another article that makes mention of the early attempts at 70mm film around the turn of the century.
http://www.xs4all.nl/~wichm/filmsize.html#widescreen
It still doesn't really explain the take up of the widescreen format and its advantages. There is the mention of the graininess but that appears to be a temporary problem that 35mm film quickly solves.
I've read elsewhere the suggestion that early action would happen in the horizontal plane so if you had a wide enough lenses, you wouldn't have to move the camera around. Any other ideas?[/url] _________________ See ya on da flip side
Matt
http://www.mattelder.com |
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Impaler member
Member # Joined: 02 Dec 1999 Posts: 1560 Location: Albuquerque.NewMexico.USA
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 9:28 pm |
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jfrancis wrote: |
yes, but film was never taller than it was wide, even when first invented. It was always "landscape" -- not "portrait" -- I think it might have been square, at most, early on, but it was never vertical |
The 70mm refers to the width of the film, not the height of the frame.
It also seems to me that a wider screen format would be more economical in the long run. With 35mm film, you would have to pan the camera twice as much to capture the same action as a 70mm reel. This translates directly into using twice as many feet (or miles) of film, making the movie more expensive to produce. This is hypothetical, of course, so multiplying by two is just an estimate.
I would also assume that a wider format would give the cinematographer and director more flexibility with angles and scene composition. [/quote] _________________ QED, sort of. |
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jfrancis member
Member # Joined: 08 Aug 2003 Posts: 443 Location: Los Angeles
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Posted: Thu May 27, 2004 10:00 pm |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/70mm%20film
70 mm film is a 5-perf format -- perfs are perforations, the holes along the side of the film. Regular 35 mm film is 4 perfs. That means each 70 mm frame actually uses 25% more film stock than a 35mm frame would.
VistaVision is actually an 8-perf format, like the film in your SLR camera -- so that would use even more film per frame.
A lot of wide format movies are composed as if they were going to be 1.66:1 -- just to be on the safe side -- regardless of what they theoretically could do. It's also a bit inconvenient to put a single person in closeup on a wide screen -- you have to worry about what to do with the rest of the image. |
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jfrancis member
Member # Joined: 08 Aug 2003 Posts: 443 Location: Los Angeles
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