Fucked up aspect ratio?
WTF is up with the square box ratio straight outta 90s DEAR LORD
shareIsn't it cool? You can crop it by yourself, just the way you like it...
shareYou mean cut out 20-30% of the footage from top or bottom? Nice.
shareGot a friend who cuts out really every movie to get this stupid 16:9 ratio. I bet he even did this with Ben Hur and Lawrence of Arabia :-(
shareIts not stupid for anything made in this century outside of super art-housy stuff like "The Lighthouse".
I'd rather not experience unnecessary black bars on my TV or PC screen.
Obviously, if I had an expensive projector with surround sound system, it'd be a different story.
When black bars are on the screen, it means NOTHING'S been cut.
It is stupid to think that 16:9 is a standard we should approve of.
shareIt's the frame as if it were shown to fit the full screen in an Imax theater.
share$70 million budget and you'd think they cut it for wide screen TVs since its being released on HBO Max? NOPE!
shareDifferent for the sake of being different
He wanted to show a vertical picture rather than a horizontal. It's no different than a 2.35 movie having black bars on the top and bottom of the screen.
shareThere are no black bars when I watch a 2.35 movie, pop the anamorphic lens on the projector, pull the curtains back a little more and it's a perfect fit no black bars... Now if some fucking imax ratio I supposed I could pull out the old Runco projector for some crap like that, but why the fuck would I go that much trouble for a 4 hour movie featuring Ben Afleck and the bed shitter. It just ain't worth the time.
shareBut then you have all the time to discuss this very movie in MovieChat's message board. Ok.
shareNone for me either, 4 way masking CIH is silly
shareBut why would they cut it for the inferior format?
shareBut it was completed for TV and he didn't film it in that aspect ratio.
It's so strange, I wonder if any of the original footage is sliced on each side, like watching a VHS release back in the day before they had wide screen versions.
I dont get it either, just when it seems people are willing to give you the benefit of the doubt you throw in a spanner like this. Dammit Zack. Otherwise, good movie. (some shoddy CGI here and there)
shareImax screens are still in that ratio. It makes sense if you are looking at a five-story tall screen in a true Imax theater. But most of us don't have a screen that big at home.
shareIMAX is 1.43:1. 35mm is 1.375:1. SD TV is 1.33:1.
shareSnyder shot this in the classic "Academy Ratio" that was the standard for years. The retro aspect ratio fits nicely with his old-fashioned take on the characters, and the way the film generally harkens back to a kindler, gentler past. Leave the modern widescreen format to the directors like Nolan, who insist on giving superhero films a dark, gritty, modern edge.
share. . .um. Sorry; it sounded like you said this film "harkens back to a kinder, gentler past."
Roflcopter, for sure.
That said, the complaints about the aspect ratio are hilarious. SO much confused rage and snark from clueless people.
You do realize that to get 2.35:1 you're really just cropping the top and bottom right? Light exiting the lens is circular, meaning a square is the best fit. So "widescreen" is really "shortscreen" and shows significantly less than fullscreen. I do find the whole making screens shorter to be funny, we have ultrashort screen now, which is even shorter than a normal widescreen and costs more as a result.
shareHBO Max is a streaming service designed with home viewing in mind, they spend 70 million dollars and not even bother try and figure out a way for widescreen release without losing footage?
Idgaf if Hack Snyderp filmed the whole thing on Imax cameras, there had to be a plan for regular cinemas too
The point is widescreen is prehistoric technology, fullscreen shows the parts of the image that were cropped out in order to make a "widescreen" version.
shareok
shareWidescreen was created in the 60s hollywood specifically because they wanted to be special snowflakes and look different than TV which was getting popular at the time.
shareYou do realize that your two eye balls see more to the left and right than they do up and down, right?
shareYou do realize a camera has one "eye ball" and your analogy doesn't apply to the real world? Besides, the corners are crap, your focus is on the center of what you're viewing not the corners.
shareThis is incorrect. Your eyeballs see in an oval forms that overlap and the closest format to our actual vision is 4:3. NASA has actually measured this very precisely when they made equipment for the manned spaceflights.
shareZack Snyder is supposedly a genius director. But he hasn't figured out there such a thing as a 16:9 HDTV and most people have them.
sharehttps://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/why-zack-snyder-justice-league-030612722.html
^^^
heres an article on it
I see the point... I can live with it.
share