In article <yKCWj.322$LL.211 at (no spam) trnddc04>,
in Technicolor® <cinerama at (no spam) verizon.net> wrote:
I don't see deployment happenning very quickly. Lots of Imax cinemas are
probably like the OMSI situation in Portland. It has been a debt ridden
museum from the beginning and have had very little in the way of keeping
up
the slide projectors, let alone swapping out their 15-70 system for
digital.
They still run all the Imax movies on 35mm full coat for sound instead of
the CD or DVD based sound systems available. They will want to keep
getting
those expensive prints until the upkeep of the mechanical projector gets
too
expensive to maintain.
Do they own the machine or do they lease it?
I can see Imax having a much easier time than existing 35mm
distributors in imposing the digital system on its users. Since
most Imax projectors are leased, they could just swap them out for
the "newer" (inferior) model. Assuming that they make available
their entire back catalog of 15/70 titles, it doesn't seem as if
this would produce much resistance from theatre operators, with
the possible exception of those who want to run non-Imax 15/70
material (is there much of this now?).
On the other hand, does anyone know if the "digital Imax" system
has been tested on dome screens?
Personally, I think that the whole idea of replacing 15/70 with 2K
DLP projectors sounds pretty dumb, though. The only way that I could
see this looking even remotely like Imax would be if they had a huge
array of 2K DLP units with custom software to do the image alignment and
hide the seams. Supposedly, though, they are just using two 2K units.
--
Scott Norwood: snorwood at (no spam) nyx.net, snorwood at (no spam) redballoon.net
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