You can shoot IMAX an email to verify cinemas as well. I did and I was quite disappointed to find out that only two IMAX theaters in Korea project film, neither of which is showing TDKR.
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You can shoot IMAX an email to verify cinemas as well. I did and I was quite disappointed to find out that only two IMAX theaters in Korea project film, neither of which is showing TDKR.
Some IMAX theatres have dual film / digital projectors. They inter-change these with a unique rail system - many of which were put in in anticipation of DKR. For DKR, film is the preferred format, but if there are problems with the print or audio, they have the option of quickly switching over to digital.
IMAX Digital is still basically 2K, but like the rest of the theatrical industry, they are working on 4K as well as laser projection with Barco.
At the IMAX here in Providence RI it was stunning. The difference between the 65 and 35mm footage was bleedingly obvious -- the 35 does not hold up well on a screen that large.
I saw Prometheus on the same screen and could see the negative space between the pixels, really wish that film had gotten 4K DI.
The list I gave you is case specific to The Dark Knight Rises... every theater that could show film, did show film for TDKR. Christopher Nolan made a pretty big deal about it since he shot 72 minutes of the film on 15/65mm. It totaled to roughly a hundred theaters world wide. A large amount of theaters that gave up on film still had their projectors sitting around, and they were used for TDKR. Honestly though, I'm in a bit of shock that you can't tell whether you saw it digitally or on 70mm. The difference between the two is painfully obvious, and hell, the digital presentations literally say "Powered by DLP" before the movie.
This link includes Canadian theatres - which is where IMAX originated :-)
http://thedarkknightrises.warnerbros.com/imax.html
I saw it in IMAX digital since 70mm projection was sold out weeks in advance. It looked good, but I couldn't tell as much of a difference between the IMAX and 35 footage as I thought I would, aside from aspect ratio and ANA to spherical differences. This surprised me as there's a huge difference on the blu ray of TDK. Now reading that IMAX digital is merely 2k, it makes more sense to me since it was projected onto such a big screen at such a low(er) resolution.
Seeing it in true IMAX Friday, and I can't wait!
The August ASC issue goes over the full photochemical workflow.....You have to appreciate the effort made for optimal quality. I am curious though where (what stage?) the 4k DCP is made. According to my guess..it seems the DCP's were made from the color timed IP.
For me, it re-surfaces the film generation loss vs. digital scan debate.
It also seems that certain cities (LA,NY,London named) got imax show prints being for the most part only 1 generation from the original neg.
I'm not surprised based on what I saw.
Saw it in IMAX at Universal City walk and it was the most insane experience. I went twice.. I don't really care about the movie itself but it's presentation is so amazing that I had to drag some friends that saw it in a regular theatre to show them the difference. They could not believe it. The 35mm vs 65mm is astonishing, it's like experiencing standard def vs HD for the first time but on a MASSIVE 80FT screen! The depth on wide shots is incredible, the film grain etc, what an experience. If you have not seen it and you have an IMAX nearby don't even think about going to a regular theatre.
Enjoy it while its still there because film is going away and it's sad.
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