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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Author
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Topic: Roma (2018)
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Mark Ogden
Jedi Master Film Handler
Posts: 943
From: Little Falls, N.J.
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 12-10-2018 05:59 PM
Mexico City, 1970: After the dissolution of her employer’s marriage, housekeeper Cleo must continue to help raise their five children while dealing with her own unplanned pregnancy. In Spanish with English subtitles at the iPic Hudson Lights Cinema, Fort Lee, New Jersey.
*****
That’s pretty much the whole plot, a fact that caused another film-goer near me to have a conniption as the lights came up (“That’s IT? Where was the story?”, she wanted to know). There may not seem to be much here to hang a two-hour plus picture on, but what there is is very good and very moving, and not for nothing was it named Best Picture of the Year by the New York, Los Angeles and Chicago Film Critic groups. Cleo is a small person in a big tumultuous world of political upheaval, just trying to keep her wits about her as both her home life and her personal life go through devastating changes, with some of those changes becoming almost unbearable to watch (be prepared for one of the most harrowing child-delivery scenes ever shot). It’s a beautifully made and performed movie about a woman few people in real life would take notice of, and I’m happy I saw it in a theater as the film is visually sweeping enough that it would be diminished on anything but a big screen.
Technically, the film is presented in 2.39:1 and was shot on the very popular Arri Alexa 65. The picture is largely a series of wide shots, and I saw a degree of lens distortion in some of them, but mostly the cinematography is stunning. Terrific audio too. This isn't an Atmos title but it probably should have been, there's a lot of surround happening as well as some interesting audio perspective changes in the dialogue.
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Bobby Henderson
"Ask me about Trajan."
Posts: 10973
From: Lawton, OK, USA
Registered: Apr 2001
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posted 12-10-2018 09:22 PM
I want to see this movie, but chances are I'll only get to watch it on Blu-ray or Netflix. It's not playing on any big screens near my location.
quote: Mark Ogden Technically, the film is presented in 2.39:1 and was shot on the very popular Arri Alexa 65. The picture is largely a series of wide shots, and I saw a degree of lens distortion in some of them, but mostly the cinematography is stunning.
Barrel distorsion perhaps? I know not to trust IMDb too much, but it says spherical prime lenses were used on the Arri Alexa 65. Some movie productions have used 1.25x anamorphic lenses with the Arri Alexa 65 to gain a bit of the CinemaScope look. And then they have the audacity to use the "filmed in Ultra Panavision 70" logo in the end credits. It takes both 5/65mm film and UP70 lenses to warrant the use of that logo (not to mention some 70mm prints).
quote: Mark Ogden This isn't an Atmos title but it probably should have been, there's a lot of surround happening as well as some interesting audio perspective changes in the dialogue.
Actually, a Dolby Atmos mix was created for Roma. The movie is listed on Dolby's web page of movie releases in Dolby Atmos and/or Dolby Vision: https://www.dolby.com/us/en/cinema/theatrical-releases.html
The problem with Roma and Atmos is there are very few theaters in the United States equipped with Atmos that also play art-house product. Alamo Drafthouse has a couple of Atmos-equipped screens, but refused to book Roma due to the very short release window Netflix gave it. I loved what Alfonso Cuarón and his crew did with the Atmos sound mix on Gravity. With the stress Cuarón put on booking the movie in theaters equipped with 70mm and Atmos, I imagine Roma probably has a very good Atmos mix. It's a shame very few people will hear the movie that way.
I don't know if Cuarón or the folks at Netflix know that there is currently no easy, practical way to pair a Dolby Atmos mix with a 70mm film print. 70mm and DTS is the only option now. I don't know if 70mm and DTS-X is even possible. Gotta have some way to synchronize DTS time code (or some other time code) to playback on a Dolby CP-850. The issue of pairing 70mm and Atmos on this release might be irrelevant anyway. Unless they created the final digital intermediate of Roma at the full 6.5K resolution of the Alexa 65 there's little point of using 70mm film prints. If it's a regular 4K DI a 4K DCP with Atmos should be enough.
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Sam D. Chavez
Film God
Posts: 2153
From: Martinez, CA USA
Registered: Aug 2003
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posted 01-06-2019 09:16 PM
The sound gets tweaked by Dolby folk or others on a regular basis, due to a call from the studio, mainly to make sure nothing has blown up. However, the components remain the same, amps, processors, projectors, lenses. There's only so much can change with a tweak or two. As I mentioned before the Roma soundtrack uses surrounds a lot and heavy and is of benefit to a cavernous palace like the Castro. The screen is what it is, until management decides it's time to change it. I did mention I've been servicing the Castro since the late '70's for RCA, then Dolby, and now for BACP.
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