HideousLump Wrote:
g Wrote:
All movies made before 1953 were 1.33:1, which regular TV screens were designed to match. Starting in 1953, they started making films in various degrees of widescreen, the most common being 1:85:1 (new widescreen TV screens are 1.78:1, almost the same size) and 2.35:1.
And a lot of European movies are shot in 1.66:1.
When I was in high school (ten years ago) my friend and I were obsessed with letterbox ("widescreen") and the original aspect ratio of movies. At this time only AMC showed movies in letterbox (I don't think TCM existed) and very few VHS tapes were released in letterbox. It was also pre-DVD, and we couldn't afford laserdisc. Slowly, though, more and more things were released in letterbox and we became happier. Now there is no excuse for something not being in letterbox. I have a big widescreen TV now too, so all my widescreen DVDs must also be "anamorphic widescreen" so that the 1.85:1 image fits my whole screen (though it is slighty cropped, to 1.78:1, which irks me). However, I've also discovered that movies shot in 2.35:1 are victims of what is called "overscan" by my goddamn dvd player, which projects the ratio at 2:1. That's a lot to be cropped off. To fix this, you need a dvd player that has a zoom out function, which mine of course does not. So, I'm planning on buying one that does and am holding off on watching too many dvds that feature a movie with the 2.35:1 aspect ratio.
Basically, though, I think people who prefer "full screen" are Philistines.