Oppenheimer Shot IMAX

Pride

A
Pride

  • 0
  • 0
  • 7
Paris

A
Paris

  • 3
  • 0
  • 121
Seeing right through you

Seeing right through you

  • 3
  • 1
  • 166
I'll drink to that

D
I'll drink to that

  • 0
  • 0
  • 118
Touch

D
Touch

  • 1
  • 2
  • 119

Forum statistics

Threads
198,393
Messages
2,774,082
Members
99,603
Latest member
AndyHess
Recent bookmarks
0

braxus

Member
Joined
Oct 19, 2005
Messages
1,779
Location
Fraser Valley B.C. Canada
Format
Hybrid
I've seen the movie twice at the Langley IMAX theater here in BC. I might go a third time -maybe. No issues with projection the two times I went, but the people I sat next to in the second viewing, said the show they first went to, had a technical issue and it stopped the show. Came back up an hour later, and sound 15 minutes after that. Im lucky no issues when I went.

B&W grain was noticeable on the 5 perf shots. 15 perf looked pretty clean and grainless. I noticed a contrast difference between the 5 perf color and 15 perf shots. Contrast was way higher on the 5 perf and that is probably because of the extra contact printing they did with more generations compared to the straight 15 perf shots. Grain in the color was noticeable to me too on the 5 perf stuff. Anything IMAX was clean.

I really hope they can do more IMAX prints in the future, but Nolan is pretty much the only one doing it today. Im just glad my theater kept their IMAX film projector. Probably more trouble to remove it then leave it in there. I never once got a film strip sample when we got out of the show. Both times they said they ran out of them. I do see them on Facebook Marketplace selling for $120-200, which is quite a rip off considering they were free gifts. Gotta love the fast buck. I do have a frame of IMAX from 25 years ago, showing the shuttle bay area in space and Earth in the background. It is very close to 6x7.
 

warden

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 21, 2009
Messages
2,996
Location
Philadelphia
Format
Medium Format
I saw the 70mm Imax last night. The quality of projection was outstanding, bordering on too much information in my opinion. Pores, wrinkles, errant hairs, etc. I was too close to the front for comfortable viewing and so had to move my head around a lot. Ah well.

The sound can only be described as punishing. All four of us were baffled at the decibels, and our ages spanned teenagers to fifty-somethings. There is no need for this volume if writing and cinematography are doing their jobs - we won’t fall asleep. Tell us a story without ruining what little hearing remains, pretty-please.

The theater was absolutely spotless, and the sold out crowd was perfectly behaved. No cell phones, no talking, etc. I think the rather expensive Imax experience brings people who want a cinematic experience without the bullshit.

And the movie itself? I liked the story, the cinematography, the use of sound (if not the volume), and the pacing of the narrative. I don’t know how this long movie could have been shorter. A+

The aspect ratio looked like 6x7 to me. I prefer 16x9 or so, but wow what a picture.
 
Joined
Aug 29, 2017
Messages
9,358
Location
New Jersey formerly NYC
Format
Multi Format
I saw the 70mm Imax last night. The quality of projection was outstanding, bordering on too much information in my opinion. Pores, wrinkles, errant hairs, etc. I was too close to the front for comfortable viewing and so had to move my head around a lot. Ah well.

The sound can only be described as punishing. All four of us were baffled at the decibels, and our ages spanned teenagers to fifty-somethings. There is no need for this volume if writing and cinematography are doing their jobs - we won’t fall asleep. Tell us a story without ruining what little hearing remains, pretty-please.

The theater was absolutely spotless, and the sold out crowd was perfectly behaved. No cell phones, no talking, etc. I think the rather expensive Imax experience brings people who want a cinematic experience without the bullshit.

And the movie itself? I liked the story, the cinematography, the use of sound (if not the volume), and the pacing of the narrative. I don’t know how this long movie could have been shorter. A+

The aspect ratio looked like 6x7 to me. I prefer 16x9 or so, but wow what a picture.

I take a tissue with me and roll two little balls that I stuff in my ears when the volume gets that loud. My tinnitus is bad enough.
 

cmacd123

Subscriber
Joined
May 24, 2007
Messages
4,310
Location
Stittsville, Ontario
Format
35mm
first result from a Google search shows "With IMAX format, each frame is 15 perforations wide, and the area of the frame is about 52mm high by 70mm wide " 6X7 would of course be 60X70mm so darn close.
 

warden

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 21, 2009
Messages
2,996
Location
Philadelphia
Format
Medium Format
I take a tissue with me and roll two little balls that I stuff in my ears when the volume gets that loud. My tinnitus is bad enough.

I use hearing protection but that affects the sound quality. It’s silly honestly, and unnecessary. I noticed a few other people in the audience with their fingers in their ears.
 

Tom Taylor

Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2005
Messages
565
Location
California
Format
Multi Format
The sound can only be described as punishing. All four of us were baffled at the decibels, and our ages spanned teenagers to fifty-somethings. There is no need for this volume if writing and cinematography are doing their jobs - we won’t fall asleep. Tell us a story without ruining what little hearing remains,

Apparently, the sound quality varies from theatre to theatre. At the Esquire in Sacramento my experience was the same as Warden's regardless of whether it was sampled from front or rear seating. But at the Regal in Dublin it was perfect. Unless there was a problem with the speakers in Sacramento, this appears to be a simple problem of volume control.
 

Rrrgcy

Subscriber
Joined
Mar 10, 2016
Messages
211
Location
So FL
Format
Medium Format
No after-film souvenirs given in Fort Lauderdale. The sound was about a 9 of 10, pushed quite loud but not excruciating; the rumble of your inner organs and body when the bomb went off was certainly something (will be a lasting memory). The volume was probably necessary. We got in line 15 mins before show start so sat in top section of the bottom closest 1/4 to the front which is not ideal, had to concentrate and focus on the center of the screen to make it watchable which absolutely disturbed optimal visual enjoyment.

Definitely some ”grain-like“ sharp distinct speck mottling effect in some B&W scenes (first B&W part shown, to my recollection, I recall being distracted by this as the field to the right was quite empty of detail, a consistent grey, and you could see it well).

Very lush very detailed aesthetic but it also relied a little too much in many scenes with open focus to blur background (C. Nolan explained his preference for this in some preview). I found that sometimes a little too unnatural and distracting. I’d prefer more background detail in several certain captures.
 
Last edited:

cmacd123

Subscriber
Joined
May 24, 2007
Messages
4,310
Location
Stittsville, Ontario
Format
35mm
Does anybody know what Nolan had the Double-X developed in? D-96?
the lab was a motion picture lab which modified their B&W negative machine tohandle 65mm. Film processing was done at Fotokem in Los Angeles. I would guess that Fotokem ran the same process that they would use with 35mm 5222. (which implies D96)

much background info at

 
OP
OP
Andrew O'Neill

Andrew O'Neill

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Jan 16, 2004
Messages
11,882
Location
Coquitlam,BC Canada
Format
Multi Format
the lab was a motion picture lab which modified their B&W negative machine tohandle 65mm. Film processing was done at Fotokem in Los Angeles. I would guess that Fotokem ran the same process that they would use with 35mm 5222. (which implies D96)

much background info at


Thank you Charles. I did read through that a while back, but could not find anything stating which developer was used. But you are probably correct in that D96 was used. Cheers!
 

Tom Taylor

Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2005
Messages
565
Location
California
Format
Multi Format
Seeing the movie motivated me to set-up the projector (ProCabin 67Z w/150mm lens) and view some 6x7 slides which I haven't done in a while. I have many hundreds if not thousands of them mounted in both glass and cardboard mounts. Using a 50x67" screen (84" diagonal, 4:3 aspect) gives you the 70mm IMax visual sensation. If the immediate foreground of the slide is sharply focused, you get the sensation of standing right there. Most of my slides are of landscapes and I took care when shooting them to use the hyperfocal distance of the lens (much easier with Pentax lenses) to keep the foreground and background in sharp focus throughout. If that foreground is, say grass, then the individual grass blades are sharply focused accentuating the "standing right there" sensation.

Most of my shots are taken in landscape orientation but a few of them are portrait compositions and those won't fit onto the screen without moving the projector further in. I could save those for last or change the FL of the lens to, say 200mm. Multiplying 200mm by the reciprocal of the aspect ratio seems to fit. Cabin did make a 200mm lens for the 67Z but I haven't found any for sale. Below is a snap of the screen as set-up over the weekend with a cardboard mounted slide. The image was taken on a hiking trip to Torre del Paine NP in Chile.

IMG_2886 (2).JPG
 

mshchem

Subscriber
Joined
Nov 26, 2007
Messages
14,508
Location
Iowa City, Iowa USA
Format
Medium Format
Seeing the movie motivated me to set-up the projector (ProCabin 67Z w/150mm lens) and view some 6x7 slides which I haven't done in a while. I have many hundreds if not thousands of them mounted in both glass and cardboard mounts. Using a 50x67" screen (84" diagonal, 4:3 aspect) gives you the 70mm IMax visual sensation. If the immediate foreground of the slide is sharply focused, you get the sensation of standing right there. Most of my slides are of landscapes and I took care when shooting them to use the hyperfocal distance of the lens (much easier with Pentax lenses) to keep the foreground and background in sharp focus throughout. If that foreground is, say grass, then the individual grass blades are sharply focused accentuating the "standing right there" sensation.

Most of my shots are taken in landscape orientation but a few of them are portrait compositions and those won't fit onto the screen without moving the projector further in. I could save those for last or change the FL of the lens to, say 200mm. Multiplying 200mm by the reciprocal of the aspect ratio seems to fit. Cabin did make a 200mm lens for the 67Z but I haven't found any for sale. Below is a snap of the screen as set-up over the weekend with a cardboard mounted slide. The image was taken on a hiking trip to Torre del Paine NP in Chile.


Did anyone have commercial process and mounting available for 6x7? I've seen old Kodak processed Ektachrome in flimsy cardboard mounts. I have a Kindermann projector for 6x6 slides. Amazing how much better these look than 35mm. I would love to have a way to project 6x17 chromes. Wouldn't that be something 😊
 

Tom Taylor

Member
Joined
Jul 10, 2005
Messages
565
Location
California
Format
Multi Format
As far as I am aware no commercial labs mounted 6x7 transparencies - you had to do it yourself. Gepe, Journal, and Blair were the only manufactures of 6x7 mounts that I am aware of. Gepe made both AN glass and glassless plastic mounts and Journal, I believe, only glassless. Blair made cardboard mounts in 6x7, 6x9, 4x5 and maybe 8x10 size. The 6x7 Blair was sold through Adorama which is where I ordered them from until they were discontinued. InkJet Arts in Salt Lake City was the Blair distributor and I stopped by their location while on a road trip and purchased the remaining inventory of 6x7, 6x9 and 4x5 mounts. I still have a few hundred remaining but the adhesive needs to be renewed. Cabin based the 67Z projector on the Gepe mount which fits perfectly. The Blair mount is slightly larger than the Gepe so it is necessary to fiddle with it when inserting to make it fit but it is made from good strong cardboard so it doesn't bend easily and wears well. Conveniently, there is a small "dimple" placed on one side enabling you to tell which side is the front side. Noblex made a 4x5 projector that B&H sold for $3,000. At the time I didn't have the $3K and when I did, they were discontinued. I looked around for a used one but only found one which was priced at $2K-which I had at the time, but it was located somewhere in Eastern Europe and paypal insurance back then wouldn't cover the purchase so I didn't pull the trigger.

Thomas
 

richyd

Member
Joined
Jul 24, 2012
Messages
202
Location
London UK
Format
Medium Format
Gross worldwide now over $900 million. If only Kodak got royalties. And thanks to Nolan and Kodak for generating the buzz around film cinematographic projection. I notice many new features have been shot using film, e.g. Scorsese's new film, but not so many have any projection print.
 

Richard Man

Member
Joined
Sep 24, 2005
Messages
1,301
Format
Multi Format
Just saw it on IMAX 70mm. I avoided all trailers prior and was amazed how smooth the skins look on youtube ;-)
 

Agulliver

Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2015
Messages
3,518
Location
Luton, United Kingdom
Format
Multi Format
I saw the regular IMAX showing, as I just didn't fancy travelling into London for the BFI IMAX in 30C heat...and there's two IMAX cinemas using digital projection much closer to where I live, which are accessible by air conditioned car :smile:

It did stand out as being visually and audibly stunning. I can't imagine this will be anything like as good on even a regular cinema screen letalone a TV, even a 72 inch TV. I do hope this increases awareness of film, with the social media posts about Kodak working on IMAX B&W film for the first time. It did look different to anything else I've seen recently. Even digitally projected.
 
Joined
Nov 21, 2005
Messages
7,530
Location
San Clemente, California
Format
Multi Format
We haven't exposed ourselves to a crowded theater since the pandemic started. Our tradition was always to see a new movie in one during the year-end holidays. Still unwilling to be in close quarters with the masses, this week I bought an Oppenheimer Blu-Ray package. Cost considerably less than two tickets to a 70mm-projecting venue. Watched it in our own comfortable chairs. Avoided the flicker of film projection. Had total control of the audio volume (although, in my opinion, music was too loud compared to dialog. Neither of us have any hearing impairments). Didn't suffer from the format chopping that most IMAX projection imposes; the full 2.20:1 aspect ratio was visible.

For anyone who's interested in all the factors and production trivia covered in this thread, the included "Special Features" disc would be beneficial. It's nearly as long as the three-hour feature disc.
 

Kino

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 20, 2006
Messages
7,710
Location
Orange, Virginia
Format
Multi Format
I know the guy who churned-out a bajillion of those 70mm promotional film strips for this film.

Funny to see them selling for outrageous prices on Fleabay and other places.
 
Joined
Aug 29, 2017
Messages
9,358
Location
New Jersey formerly NYC
Format
Multi Format
We haven't exposed ourselves to a crowded theater since the pandemic started. Our tradition was always to see a new movie in one during the year-end holidays. Still unwilling to be in close quarters with the masses, this week I bought an Oppenheimer Blu-Ray package. Cost considerably less than two tickets to a 70mm-projecting venue. Watched it in our own comfortable chairs. Avoided the flicker of film projection. Had total control of the audio volume (although, in my opinion, music was too loud compared to dialog. Neither of us have any hearing impairments). Didn't suffer from the format chopping that most IMAX projection imposes; the full 2.20:1 aspect ratio was visible.

For anyone who's interested in all the factors and production trivia covered in this thread, the included "Special Features" disc would be beneficial. It's nearly as long as the three-hour feature disc.

Did you make up some popcorn?
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom