Escapay wrote:
There's still one thing wrong that nobody picked up on yet, and it's related to my second clue:
Something isn't as wide as they believe it is.
albert
Well, the answer to this would have to be Lasseter saying "And this movie was made in the widest of widescreen formats. You know, Super Technirama.". The truth of the matter is Super Technirama 70 isn't the widest of the widescreen formats. I know that Ultra Panavision 70 is actually wider, which yielded an aspect ratio of approximately 2.76:1.
Some history on Ultra Panavision 70 (from Wikipedia):
Ultra Panavision 70, also known as MGM Camera 65, was the marketing brand used to identify 65/70 mm movies photographed with Panavision anamorphic optics between 1957 and 1966.
The frame dimensions and six-track stereo soundtrack configuration of Ultra Panavision 70 were virtually identical to those established for the Todd-AO 65/70 mm process in 1955. However, the optics incorporated a 1.25X anamorphic "squeeze," yielding, at its widest, an ultra-wide projected aspect ratio of approximately 2.76:1.
History
The special optics were initially developed in association with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, who used it to photograph two movies, Raintree County (1956) and Ben-Hur (1959). These were advertised as being produced in MGM Camera 65.
MGM Camera 65 is a wide-screen film format developed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in the 1950s, as a single-strip substitute for Cinerama. However, the screens used for showing Ben-Hur and Raintree County were not curved, as Cinerama and Todd-AO's were, but rectangular, in the manner of Cinemascope, and Raintree County was ultimately only shown in a 2.35:1 reduction print - the first film shown in Camera 65's full 70mm width was Ben-Hur. The process used 65 mm film stock and a special anamorphic lens developed by Panavision, which imparted a slight horizontal squeeze by a factor of 1.25x. This yielded an aspect ratio of approximately 2.76:1, which was similar to three-strip Cinerama. It was only used on fewer than a dozen films due to the extremely large and heavy cameras and its unusually wide aspect ratio, which was incompatible with most theaters. 35 mm anamorphic prints made from Camera 65 negatives were usually cropped to 2.35:1, and were indistinguishable from Cinemascope films. However, when Ben-Hur was originally released on laserdisc and DVD, it was issued in its original 2.76:1 ratio, giving it for a time the "widest" letterboxing ever seen on a home video release, with very large "black borders" on the top and bottom. Warner Bros' 2008 video release of How the West Was Won is now the widest release on home video, at 2.89:1.
The process was subsequently refined, re-named Ultra Panavision 70 and used to photograph seven additional features.
Many of the films advertised in Ultra Panavision 70 were presented in 70 mm Cinerama in selected theaters. Special lenses were used to project a "rectified" (optically pre-distorted) 70 mm print onto a deeply-curved screen to mimic the effect of the original 3-strip Cinerama process.
Portions of the 1962 Cinerama feature How the West Was Won were photographed using Ultra Panavision 70, and then optically converted to the 3-strip format.
Films:
* Raintree County (1957) - credited as MGM Camera 65; released only in 35 mm CinemaScope prints
* Ben-Hur (1959) - credited as MGM Camera 65, with "Photographic Lenses by Panavision"
* How the West Was Won (1962) - selected scenes only
* Mutiny on the Bounty (1962) - the last Ultra Panavision film using the full 2.76: 1 aspect ratio.
* It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) - presented in 70 mm Cinerama
* The Fall of the Roman Empire (1964)
* To Be Alive! (1964) - 70 mm version created from original 3-strip format
* The Greatest Story Ever Told (1965) - presented in 70 mm Cinerama
* The Hallelujah Trail (1965) - presented in 70 mm Cinerama
* Battle of the Bulge (1965) - presented in 70 mm Cinerama
* Khartoum (1966) - presented in 70 mm Cinerama
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Am I correct, Scaps? Do I get a dancing pink elephant?
