Super Panavision 70

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Super Panavision 70 was the marketing brand name used to identify movies photographed with Panavision 70 mm spherical optics between 1959 and 1983.

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[edit] History

During the late 1950s the Hollywood filmmaking community decided that changing from filming in the commonly accepted 35mm format to 65mm film would provide viewing audiences with an enhanced visual experience. To this end, cameras begin to be designed to handle 65mm film stock. The first camera system to be released using this format was Todd-AO, in 1955. The second was MGM Camera 65, a system designed by Panavision, which was introduced in 1956. In 1959 Panavision released the Super Panavision 70 system to compete with these two cameras. Unlike its counterpart Ultra Panavision 70, which used anamorphic lenses, Super Panavision used spherical lenses to create a final aspect ratio of 2.20:1.

In 1959, the Walt Disney company was the first studio to release a film, The Big Fisherman, using this process.

Some of the films made in Super Panavision 70 were presented in 70 mm Cinerama in selected theaters. Special optics were used to project the 70 mm prints onto a deeply-curved screen to mimic the effect of the original 3-strip Cinerama process.

[edit] Movies using Super Panavision 70

[edit] 1959

[edit] 1960

[edit] 1961

[edit] 1962

[edit] 1964

[edit] 1965

[edit] 1966

[edit] 1968

[edit] 1969

[edit] 1970

[edit] 1977

  • Close Encounters of the Third Kind (special effects shots only; early promotional material erroneously suggested that the entire film was produced in Super Panavision 70)

[edit] 1982

  • Tron (live-action scenes and partial-CGI scenes only; entirely-CGI shots filmed in VistaVision)

[edit] 1983

[edit] 1984

  • Auto-E-Motion (BMW promotional short subject)

[edit] Panavision System 65/Super 70

In the early 1990s, in response to an increased demand for 65 mm cameras, Panavision introduced an updated line of 65 mm cameras and optics known as "Panavision System 65" or "Panavision Super 70", designed to compete with the rival Arri 765 camera. However, the lack of 70 mm projectors, combined with the advent of 35 mm digital sound taking away the multi-channel sound advantage the 70 mm format had meant that the format revival never really took on.

[edit] Movies using Panavision System 65/Super 70

[edit] 1992

[edit] 1996

  • Hamlet (the last feature photographed entirely in 65mm)

[edit] 1998

  • The Witness (short film produced for the Mashantucket Pequot Museum in Connecticut)

[edit] 2004

[edit] 2005

[edit] See also

[edit] External links