The IMAX Experience The Revolution Cinematic


Where the films were shown in the dark, single-screen cinemas with projected film images flickering black and white moving images have evolved in innovative, multi-million dollar, the great experience that it is today. An example of this is the IMAX film.


IMAX (which means "maximum image) is an example by moving the film that turned the theater experience to create much larger screens with better resolution film projected on them. IMAX films are shot in the biggest film of 65 mm which runs through a camera horizontally, creating a film image that is 69.6 mm wide and 48.5 mm in height compared to normal pictures to movie screen 48.5 mm wide and 22.1 mm high. The film then passes through the machine three times faster when exposed to 24 frames per second. The result is a movie with incredible clarity, even on large screens. This, combined with a six-channel audio system, resulting in an extraordinary cinematic experience.

The key to the experience of the IMAX cinema in various components or elements, all working together. These include:

A large film format (as explained above), which allows much better resolution and clarity (up to 5 x in detail)

A six-channel audio system, which is separated from the film itself (and not embedded in the film web, such as a conventional film). IMAX film strips are made in a Digital Audio System Control theater (DTAC), and the soundtrack is a single uncompressed audio file containing six channels that are sent directly to the amplifiers (unlike other systems that require a decoder).

A unique projection system designed and custom built to host the IMAX theater stock and run with the standard 24 frames per second

The film itself, which is designed for spectators to watch the screen directly involve your entire field of vision.

The production cost of an IMAX movie is the main reason it has never been seriously considered as a form of self entertainment. IMAX films are actually classic films, which are blown digitally using digital technology IMAX Re-Mastering (DRM). This was first used in 2002 with the conversion of Warner Brothers Apollo 13, followed by The Matrix Reloaded and Matrix Revolutions in 2003. However, many movies these days contain scenes that were filmed specifically for IMAX, as Transformers : Revenge of the Fallen, which has three scenes shot in IMAX.

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