Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Behind-the-scenes production of Hate Eight

Behind-the-scenes production of Hate Eight

"Damn Eight" was shot with a camera (Pan-Na Wei Shen Chao 70 mm) which was born more than 50 years ago. It uses 70 mm film. The director wants the cinema to show 70 mm, while ordinary film is 35 mm

Pan Shen's 70mm camera uses an anamorphic lens of 1.25 times, and the picture ratio is 2.76: 1. The director's last film Jackie Brown used the aspect ratio of 1.85: 1, and Hate the Sky is the second film with a ratio of 2.35: 1.

Panavishin

Panavison is a famous large film format in history, which is different from IMAX film. Panavison Company, founded in 1953 and 1960, developed a 65mm camera with MGM * * * and renamed it Panavison Super 70mm system. This format is somewhat similar to Todd's widescreen, but there are some key differences. It uses the industry standard frame rate of 24fps, which is suitable for flat screens, but not for curved screens. Its picture is wider, using an anamorphic lens of 1.25 times, reaching an aspect ratio of 2.76: 1, while Todd's widescreen aspect ratio is 2.2: 1.