|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Geeks of Doom is proudly powered by WordPress. Students of the Unusual™ comic cover used with permission of 3BoysProductions The Mercuri Bros.™ comic cover used with permission of Prodigal Son Press Geeks of Doom is designed and maintained by our geeky webmaster All original content copyright ©2005-2023 Geeks of Doom All external content copyright of its respective owner, except where noted |
This website is licensed under a Creative Commons License. |
| About | Privacy Policy | Contact |
I don’t understand. Why not go all or nothing? That’s still going to make all of the scenes that aren’t IMAX look like crap on the gigascreen, and it’ll probably be jarring watching the transition.
Surely once you’ve already made the investment in the cameras, using them on the rest of the movie can’t be that terrible (next to this monster’s budget)?
Comment by Nentuaby — June 2, 2007 @ 6:29 pm
@Nentuaby: The filmmakers are doing this to stand apart from other films, to make their feature more of an “event.” According to the USA Today article sited in this entry, shooting in IMAX is difficult and the film is costly. Also, shooting with the bulky cameras is loud and interferes with the dialogue. Lastly, there’s no financial benefits to doing the entire movie in IMAX at this point. But look at the publicity the film is getting just for the four scenes they are doing in IMAX — LOTS, which of course, is worth the effort for them.
Comment by Empress Eve — June 2, 2007 @ 6:38 pm