Sal Santamaura
Member
Linked to in post #1.This is an interesting video...
Linked to in post #42....From what I'm reading on the Internet however, the initial road show screenings have been plagued by technical problems...
Linked to in post #1.This is an interesting video...
Linked to in post #42....From what I'm reading on the Internet however, the initial road show screenings have been plagued by technical problems...
You can take some splicing tape to the show...
We returned home from this within the last hour. Herewith my report.The official theater list has finally been made public and tickets are available. I just purchased two for the first showing on December 25; it'll be only a 15 mile drive from home. Let's hope the projection goes smoothly.![]()
It's your decision, but, having had that experience, unless you're into gratuitous vulgar language and violence, I'd say there's no need for a question mark at the end of your quote.Sounds like it may not be worth a 120 mile round trip just for the 70mm Ultra Panavision experience?
The booth's ceiling lights went out, house lights dimmed and the projector was started. After a few more seconds of black film, a mostly red screen, with the film's logo and the word "Overture," appeared. Except it was reversed left to right and there was no sound. I immediately commented that the kid had lost his coin toss since, even after staring at the film for some time deciding how it should be threaded, he'd fed it in the wrong way, making pictures backwards and placing the soundtrack opposite of where a head could contact it.
...The booth's ceiling lights went out, house lights dimmed and the projector was started. After a few more seconds of black film, a mostly red screen, with the film's logo and the word "Overture," appeared. Except it was reversed left to right and there was no sound. I immediately commented that the kid had lost his coin toss since, even after staring at the film for some time deciding how it should be threaded, he'd fed it in the wrong way, making pictures backwards and placing the soundtrack opposite of where a head could contact it...
Thanks for the update. Regardless of whether it was a magnetic sound track of old or an optical sync track for an external audio medium, the thing was on the opposite side from where its sensor needed it to be.Back in the day 70mm used a magnetic sound track, which is not possible now as Kodak no longer will mag stripe film. I understand that they are using the system where their is a digital sync track on the print which syncs up a digital track on another media. If couse if they thread the print in reverse, that will not be picked up by the sensor. 35mm Prints also use that sync track, it is about 1/2 millimetre wide and at the edge of the analogue track, which in 35mm is the fall back. I don't think there was ever an analogue optical track format for 70mm. The reason that "70mm" movies are shot on 65mm wide film is to allow for what was 4 magnetic tracks for an early version of surround sound. the print stock is 70mm perforated 65mm.
The Extra WIDE screen of Ultra panavison DOES use the whole 5 perf high frame, (35mm is 4 perfs high) but there is a anamorphic lens that stretches the image horizontally to get the supper wide screen.
To reiterate from post #58:Gratuitous vulgar language and violence? Sounds like a Tarantino movie to me...
I decided to attend this 'roadshow' of "The Hateful Eight" purely to experience what modern film in 70mm format looked like...I had no positive expectations that the story would be in any way satisfying. It did not surprise...
Back in the day 70mm used a magnetic sound track, which is not possible now as Kodak no longer will mag stripe film. I understand that they are using the system where their is a digital sync track on the print which syncs up a digital track on another media.
Ignore the blood, look at the cinematography.
Yes. Actually if they had given digital sound to 70mm, it would perhaps have been saved from extinction, since the need for magnetic sound made the prints extremely expensive (adding the magnetic strip to the prints was a very costly process). It's far cheaper to use the optical sync + digital sound.
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