Current Events > Going to see Dunkirk in 70mm

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E32005
07/21/17 5:23:33 PM
#1:


http://money.cnn.com/2017/07/21/media/dunkirk-christopher-nolan-70mm/index.html

"You get a much bigger image, you get more detail, you get more light going through the film from the projector," Schwartz said. "You basically get a much brighter more vivid image."
The format came to prominence in feature films during the 1950's and 1960's when filmmakers used it to create epics like "Lawrence of Arabia" that felt bigger than the screen itself. Then with the rise of smaller multiplexes, changing tastes, and 70mm being expensive to both print and project, it fell out of vogue.
The medium has since staged a brief comeback thanks to big-time directors like Quentin Tarantino, who used it to film 2015's "The Hateful Eight." Now, "Dunkirk" looks to continue the tradition.
"It's a World War II movie, and it's a movie that really tries to put you right in the middle of this experience," Schwartz said. "It needs 70mm to really throw you into it."

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RebelElite791
07/21/17 11:16:31 PM
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__aCEr__
07/21/17 11:29:38 PM
#3:


The Cult of Christopher Nolan.
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