Well, this seems like an interesting, and a repeat discussion.
First off, 1.33 (1.37 is close enough, 1.66, 1.78 (and we'll lump 1.75 in there), 1.85, 2.00, 2.20 and 2.39 (including 2.35) are hardly "oddball" formats. They've been around since the 1950s. So, seeing them turn up shouldn't be too big of a surprise to deal with. 2:1 was an is a bastard of a format that was always a compromise as it is neither wide nor tall and, really, so is 1.85. But that is the DP/Director's choice but what they are really saying is we want something that isn't right...just something that is in between what is right. Again, that is their call.
Sorry Rick, 2:1 isn't innovation...it's been around too long. Heck some drive-ins and even hardtops used 2:1 screens to avoid masking and just cropped the image...back in the film days. And that is part of its problem...it just screams "compromise."
Now, onto Frank's point...Theatres are built for Flat (1.85) and Scope (2.39) movies and anything else is a crapshoot (or words to that effect). Even before Digital Cinema, "Flat" and "Scope" were the surviving formats and accommodated by all cinemas with Flat being 1.85 for most countries. Masking systems (remember them) were often 2-stop and those ratios were the ones. To be adopted, DCinema embraced the 1.85 and 2.39 ratios so one could expect all cinemas that were part of the conversion between late-2009 (series 2 projectors) and 2013 to support those ratios and only those ratios.
DCI and other standards never meant to prohibit other ratios but if one is going to use them, they are doing so at their own peril as there is no guarantee that they will be presented optimally. The container system (Flat and Scope) are designed to ensure that they can be presented anywhere since all presentation formats must fall within those two containers.
S-220 was supposed to be deprecated as F-220 yields a higher resolution.
I give credit to Universal in reviving S-220 and offering the title in both F-220 and S-220 to allow theatres to use their largest screen ratio and not have a floating image. 1.85 screens will have a letterbox, as normal, for all wider-than-1.85 and Scope screens will have pillars on each side...which is far superior to having the entire image "float" in the middle of the screen.
We have been setting our cinemas up for 1.33, 1.66, 1.78, Flat, F-200, F-220, Scope for some time now (I'd say since 2013). And our Art/Revival houses always got S-220 too. We'll start putting S-220 back on the install list as I think it could be more of a trend and clearly it is not deprecated. No, we don't set up for S-276 as it is rare enough to only warrant setting up for those rare occurrences. Odds are, using their normal Scope preset will be sufficient to handle it and their masking system likely won't come in far enough, if top/bottom masking is there.
As for the causal belief that setting up for a new ratio is nothing more than a facetime job away. Really? How are you going to set light levels doing that if there is a lens zoom? There really should be push-back for adding to the ratio list as it, geometrically, increases the time of support since each ratio needs to be checked to verify good lens registration (and masking preset) plus keeping the light levels correct.
If you want to shoot for video, use whatever ratio you want. If you want to shoot for commercial exhibition, stick to the established ratios or live with poor presentations that you created.
The realities are, ALL titles should have a safe Flat or Scope format offered and with, at least, 5.1 audio. That was the promise when the whole DCI thing started. Merely letterboxing or pillarboxing do not ensure it will look good, however.
First off, 1.33 (1.37 is close enough, 1.66, 1.78 (and we'll lump 1.75 in there), 1.85, 2.00, 2.20 and 2.39 (including 2.35) are hardly "oddball" formats. They've been around since the 1950s. So, seeing them turn up shouldn't be too big of a surprise to deal with. 2:1 was an is a bastard of a format that was always a compromise as it is neither wide nor tall and, really, so is 1.85. But that is the DP/Director's choice but what they are really saying is we want something that isn't right...just something that is in between what is right. Again, that is their call.
Sorry Rick, 2:1 isn't innovation...it's been around too long. Heck some drive-ins and even hardtops used 2:1 screens to avoid masking and just cropped the image...back in the film days. And that is part of its problem...it just screams "compromise."
Now, onto Frank's point...Theatres are built for Flat (1.85) and Scope (2.39) movies and anything else is a crapshoot (or words to that effect). Even before Digital Cinema, "Flat" and "Scope" were the surviving formats and accommodated by all cinemas with Flat being 1.85 for most countries. Masking systems (remember them) were often 2-stop and those ratios were the ones. To be adopted, DCinema embraced the 1.85 and 2.39 ratios so one could expect all cinemas that were part of the conversion between late-2009 (series 2 projectors) and 2013 to support those ratios and only those ratios.
DCI and other standards never meant to prohibit other ratios but if one is going to use them, they are doing so at their own peril as there is no guarantee that they will be presented optimally. The container system (Flat and Scope) are designed to ensure that they can be presented anywhere since all presentation formats must fall within those two containers.
S-220 was supposed to be deprecated as F-220 yields a higher resolution.
I give credit to Universal in reviving S-220 and offering the title in both F-220 and S-220 to allow theatres to use their largest screen ratio and not have a floating image. 1.85 screens will have a letterbox, as normal, for all wider-than-1.85 and Scope screens will have pillars on each side...which is far superior to having the entire image "float" in the middle of the screen.
We have been setting our cinemas up for 1.33, 1.66, 1.78, Flat, F-200, F-220, Scope for some time now (I'd say since 2013). And our Art/Revival houses always got S-220 too. We'll start putting S-220 back on the install list as I think it could be more of a trend and clearly it is not deprecated. No, we don't set up for S-276 as it is rare enough to only warrant setting up for those rare occurrences. Odds are, using their normal Scope preset will be sufficient to handle it and their masking system likely won't come in far enough, if top/bottom masking is there.
As for the causal belief that setting up for a new ratio is nothing more than a facetime job away. Really? How are you going to set light levels doing that if there is a lens zoom? There really should be push-back for adding to the ratio list as it, geometrically, increases the time of support since each ratio needs to be checked to verify good lens registration (and masking preset) plus keeping the light levels correct.
If you want to shoot for video, use whatever ratio you want. If you want to shoot for commercial exhibition, stick to the established ratios or live with poor presentations that you created.
The realities are, ALL titles should have a safe Flat or Scope format offered and with, at least, 5.1 audio. That was the promise when the whole DCI thing started. Merely letterboxing or pillarboxing do not ensure it will look good, however.
Comment