Hartford Courant

Nolan breaks down best ways to watch movie

Filmmaker explains why various formats matter on big screen

- By Lindsey Bahr

It’s no secret that Christophe­r Nolan made “Oppenheime­r” to be seen on the big screen. But not all big screens are created equal.

That’s part of the reason why Universal Pictures has made “Oppenheime­r” tickets available early for over a thousand “premium large format” (or PLF) screens, with options including IMAX 70mm, 70mm, IMAX digital, 35mm and Dolby Cinema.

Knowing that even those words can get overwhelmi­ng and technical, Nolan went a step further. In a recent interview, he offered a guide to his favorite formats, explaining why it matters and even where he likes to sit so that audiences don’t feel like they need a film school degree (or one in theoretica­l physics) before settling on a theater.

“You rarely get the chance to really talk to moviegoers directly about why you love a particular format and why if they can find an IMAX screen to see the film on, that’s great,” Nolan said. “We put a lot of effort into shooting the film in a way that we can get it out on these large-format screens. It really is just a great way of giving people an experience that they can’t possibly get in the home.”

In a film about J. Robert Oppenheime­r, the theoretica­l physicist who oversaw the developmen­t of the first atomic bomb during World War II, this will be especially pivotal in viewing the Trinity Test, the first detonation of a nuclear weapon. Nolan and his effects teams re-created the blast, with all its blinding brilliance.

“We knew that this had to be the showstoppe­r,” Nolan said. “We’re able to do things with picture now that before we were really only able to do with sound in terms of an oversize impact for the audience — an almost physical sense of response to the film.”

“Oppenheime­r,” starring Cillian Murphy, opens in theaters July 21.

The big picture

“Oppenheime­r” was shot using some of the highest resolution film cameras that exist. Like “Dunkirk” and “Tenet,” “Oppenheime­r” was filmed entirely on large format film stock, meaning a combinatio­n of IMAX 65mm and Panavision 65mm (think David Lean/ “Lawrence of Arabia”), that’s then projected in 70mm.

“The sharpness and the clarity and the depth of the image is unparallel­ed,” Nolan said. “The headline, for me, is by shooting on IMAX 70mm film, you’re really letting the screen disappear. You’re getting a feeling of 3D without the glasses. You’ve got a huge screen, and you’re filling the peripheral vision of the audience. You’re immersing them in the world of the film.”

Nolan has been shooting with IMAX cameras since “The Dark Knight.” Audiences would regularly gasp at seeing its first shot projected in IMAX 70mm. Though it’s “just a helicopter shot” of some buildings in Chicago, it helps explain the ineffable power of the format.

On a technical level, the IMAX film resolution is almost 10 times more than a 35mm projector, and each frame has some 18,000 pixels of resolution versus a home HD screen that has 1,920 pixels.

Why is it shot on 65MM and projected in 70MM?

The 5mm difference goes back to when that extra space on the film had to be reserved for the soundtrack. With digital sound, that’s unnecessar­y and it is “purely a visual enhancemen­t,” Nolan explained.

Do the different formats impact how the film is shot?

“We have to plan very carefully because by shooting an IMAX film, you capture a lot of informatio­n,” he said. “Your movie is going to translate very well to all the formats because you’re getting the ultimate amount of visual informatio­n. But there are different shapes to the screen — what we call aspect ratios. What you have to plan is how you then frame your imagery so that it can be presented in different theaters with equal success.”

Starting with “The

Dark Knight,” the crew developed a system they call “center punching the action” so that nothing is lost. Cinematogr­apher Hoyte van Hoytema is also always aware of the “frame lines for the different theaters” when looking through the camera.

On the biggest presentati­ons, IMAX 1.43:1 (the massive square screen), the screen essentiall­y disappears for the audience. For other formats like 35mm, the top and the bottom get cropped.

But, Nolan said, “from a creative point of view, what we’ve found over the years is that there’s no compromise to compositio­n.”

Why not make an entire movie in IMAX?

The IMAX cameras are just too loud for dialoguehe­avy scenes, but Nolan is

optimistic about the new cameras being developed.

What’s the significan­ce of the black-and-white sequences?

Some of “Oppenheime­r” is presented in black and white for a specific story reason.

“I knew that I had two timelines that we were running in the film,” Nolan said. “One is in color, and that’s Oppenheime­r’s subjective experience. That’s the bulk of the film. Then the other is a blackand-white timeline. It’s a more objective view of his story from a different character’s point of view.”

Nolan’s desire for the black-and-white portions to be of equal image quality to the rest of the film led to the developmen­t of the first black-and-white IMAX film stock, which Kodak made and Fotokem developed.

Nolan’s favorite theatrical formats

For Nolan, the “best possible experience” to view “Oppenheime­r” in theaters is the IMAX 70mm film presentati­ons. These are also among the rarest, set for 25 locations in North America.

The prints span over 11 miles of film stock, weigh some 600 pounds and run through film projectors horizontal­ly.

There will also be over 100 70mm prints (“a fabulous presentati­on,” Nolan said) sent to theaters around the world, with over 77 (and more to come) on sale in North America at major chains and many independen­t locations.

“The two formats are sort of different, and I love them both,” he said.

The sequences projected in IMAX 70mm really “come to life” on those screens, and vice versa for the 70mm sequences on those specific projectors. In IMAX theaters, for example, things shot with IMAX film cameras will expand vertically to fill the entire screen.

IMAX digital, laser and exhibitor PLF options

The vast majority of moviegoers in North America will have easier access to digital presentati­ons. These include IMAX digital, which can sometimes mean a laser-projected image and other times involves a retro formatted screen, and what’s called “exhibitor PLF,” meaning

large format screen and projection systems developed by individual theater chains (like Regal RPX, Cinemark XD and Cineplex Ultraavx). When in doubt, look for an “X” in the name.

But don’t dismay: It’ll still look great, according to Nolan, whose team has worked for six months to digitize the original film for other formats to ensure the best experience on every screen.

“This is the exciting thing about shooting an IMAX film: When you scan it for the digital format, you’re working with the absolute best possible image that you could acquire, and that translates wonderfull­y to the new projector formats like the laser projectors,” he said.

Where are the best seats?

Well, that comes down to personal preference but here’s where Nolan likes to sit.

“When I’m in a theater that’s Cinemascop­e ratio, I like to be right near the front, middle of the third row,” he said. “When I’m in a stadium, IMAX 1.43:1, then I actually like to be a little behind the center line right up at the middle. So, a little further back.”

 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Director Christophe­r Nolan, center, and actor Cillian Murphy, right, stand on the “Oppenheime­r” set as a crew member works with an IMAX camera in the foreground.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Director Christophe­r Nolan, center, and actor Cillian Murphy, right, stand on the “Oppenheime­r” set as a crew member works with an IMAX camera in the foreground.
 ?? MELINDA SUE GORDON/UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Filmmaker Christophe­r Nolan works with an IMAX camera on the set with actor Cillian Murphy during the filming of “Oppenheime­r.”
MELINDA SUE GORDON/UNIVERSAL PICTURES Filmmaker Christophe­r Nolan works with an IMAX camera on the set with actor Cillian Murphy during the filming of “Oppenheime­r.”

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