redhawk23
Wrestlin'
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- Jan 4, 2008
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IMAX is certainly a marketing gimmick, but it is different just in terms of there is literally a large portion of the image missing when you don't see the film in that format where as you get pretty much the same information across whether you watch a movie in 2d or 3d.
Its very similar to the difference between fullscreen and widescreen.
In my experience with Interstellar, it suffers badly with the space scenes cut down to the standard size. Just as this shot from Mad Max loses whole characters, a lot of the imagery in the film pretty much doesn't work in the standard format. For instance there were external shots of the nose cone of Ranger ship that on my first screening were really frustrating as the front of the ship filled almost the whole frame. In the IMAX framing you could see what was actually being filmed, the clouds and the landscape rushing by. Much of that is simply missing from the standard format version of the film, which Nolan can rightly be criticized for. I don't very much care to ever see it on home video at all.
Its very similar to the difference between fullscreen and widescreen.
In my experience with Interstellar, it suffers badly with the space scenes cut down to the standard size. Just as this shot from Mad Max loses whole characters, a lot of the imagery in the film pretty much doesn't work in the standard format. For instance there were external shots of the nose cone of Ranger ship that on my first screening were really frustrating as the front of the ship filled almost the whole frame. In the IMAX framing you could see what was actually being filmed, the clouds and the landscape rushing by. Much of that is simply missing from the standard format version of the film, which Nolan can rightly be criticized for. I don't very much care to ever see it on home video at all.
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