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You have seen the 35 mm SLR cameras? Film type camera, with usually interchangeable lenses, produces pictures or "slides". The 35mm is the film size across. It is a standard, or was the standard, media that movie theaters used to show movies. The standard movie gave a picture on the screen that would be now compared to the 4:3 ratio of your television. Cinema Scope - wide angle, we now call letterbox. (or the best similarities) This shows the same movie but you see more. For example in the movie Titanic, when she starts to go under, there is a scene showing the stern. As she rises, 35mm would show just the scene with the center props. Cinemascope or letter box or wide screen shows all three screws and then some.
Or if you have a large gang of people the 35mm would show oner person talking then another while wide screen you would see both people talking while seeing the whole crowd..

Dolby first started adjusting sound on tape to remove excessive hiss. All tape recordings can give a hiss in the sound, the sound of the tape going over the record head. DNR started to appear on tapes and VHS with the players having DNR c and DNR B. (depending on how much noise reduction you needed to use). This process also took out some of the highs needed for full sound. Now Dolby is recognized as full theater sound. Giving you Front left and right, Center for dialogue, and rear, and with sub woofer sound. The sub provides the punch allowing for small better speakers on front and rear for sound effects and such (highs and mids) In Dolby surround, the character voices come from the center channel, like in a theater. Standard Dolby surround has front left, center, front right, rear right and left and subwoofer. The rear speakers being two speakers but actually the same channel. In surround sound, you only hear these speakers if ther is a surround signal sent to them. 5.1 surround breaks the rear down to 2 separate channels.

2006-09-05 01:41:15 · answer #1 · answered by orion_1812@yahoo.com 6 · 1 0

35 mm and 70 mm are film sizes. 35 is the industry standard. Because 70mm film is bigger, you can project it on a bigger screen without losing image quality. Cinemascope is actually a lens system used for widescreen movies. The lenses on the camera when they are making the movie squish the image so everything is tall and skinny and then the lenses on the projector stretch the image back out and give you a wide projected image. Cinemascope is not regularly used anymore. Now they crop the image on the film to give a widescreen or letterboxed look. Dolby was developed to reduce tape hiss. It is basically compression of sound to make it sound cleaner.

2006-09-05 03:26:46 · answer #2 · answered by sqclean 1 · 0 0

The difference is the width of the projection screen... Or the aspect ratio. 3.5mm is the narrowest... 70mm is twice as wide... Cinema scope is some Fox version of that. Probably a bit wider.

Digital doby supposedly sounds good, but I doubt most people really could tell a difference if they went to see a movie with a different sound technology.

2006-09-05 01:30:05 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Heck, yeah! I think it was the third Harry Potter movie....I had recently had knee surgery and was on some serious pain killers, and the kids really wanted to see the movie the day it came out...and thus, I slept through most of it... Still haven't seen the darn thing...there were a few other Disney charmers I nodded off during, when my older one was 4 or 5 and I had a baby under one who kept me up half the night... (Don't worry though, we had a sitter for the baby and Dad was with us in the theater! Wouldn't want anyone to think I took my kid to the movies so I could get a nap in!)

2016-03-17 01:34:32 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Cinemascope Movies

2016-11-09 23:12:06 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Cinemascope Screen

2017-01-02 11:47:35 · answer #6 · answered by stanberry 4 · 0 0

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