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 Sean Cubitt writes:

> The software governing aspect ratios is more
problematic: often based on the frame aspect, it can include the edges,
which the (usually hand-cut) aperture plates and tabs of traditional
cinema excluded.

That one is really horses for courses: often the
plates in traditional film projectors were under- or over-cut to work
with the screen and masking as it was, or the focal distance of an
available lens (i.e. to avoid having to spend £500ish on a new prime
lens that will actually project the correct ratio with a given throw
distance and image size) not the ratio of the film as it should be
shown. This was a real problem with the 1930s picture palaces that were
then twinned and tripled in the '60s and '70s. The smaller auditoria
were often pokey, with small screens and bad sightlines, and so the
ratios would be tweaked to maximise the screen surface area in use. In
some of these places, 1:1.85 would be cropped to 1:2.0 or even wider,
because if you actually respected the intended projection ratio, the
resulting image would be little bigger than that of a large TV set.

The
big problem with digital aspect ratios is that the DCI standard only
supports two pixel aspect ratios, roughly equivelant to 1:1.85 and
'scope. So if you want to show narrower ratios in a DCP, you have to
'windowbox' (vertically crop) the image using the 1:1.85 pixel aspect
ratio. So you effectively lose about a third of the resolution that the
DLP micromirror array is capable of: in other words, in reality, your 4k
picture is about 2.8K and your 2k picture is about 1.3k. A FIAF group
headed by Nicola Mazzanti did lobby the DCI consortium to include a
native Academy ratio pixel aspect ratio in the spec when it was in
development, but they weren't successful.

> Both lenses and lamp
housings are effectively identical between analog and digital projectors
(at least at the top end) as they cope with delivering light under
control from lamp to screen...

The lamp issue is controversial. As this
article [1] hints at, xenon arc bulbs for DLP projectors are typically
30-50% more expensive than their equivalents for 35mm projection.
Furthermore, you can't do what your Australian venue did, which is to
under-run them in order to maximise their life, or to keep running them
beyond their rated hours, basically until they start to flicker. With
regular rotation and proper lamphouse ventilation, I could easily get
3,000 hours out of a 1.6k short arc (they're guaranteed for 1,500 hours,
typically). You can't do this with a digital projector: the bulbs have
an electronic control system in them (a bit like modern inkjet
cartridges that have chips in them to stop you from refilling them with
a syringe, which tells the printer that it's been refilled and causes
the printer to refuse to use it), and once they reach the end of their
rated life, they shut down. Furthermore, the system also controls the
rectifier current automatically, effectively preventing underrunning.
Some more sophisticated ones are even linked to a spot photometer hung
from the ceiling of the auditorium, and make automatic adjustments based
on the reading, to maintain the light output at the regulation 16ft-l.
The manufacturer featured in this article claims that the arc in a
d-cinema xenon has to be smaller and more intense, hence higher
manufacturing costs. But there's no doubt that lamp running costs are
yet another example of the up-front cost of putting the image on the
screen being transferred from distributor to exhibitor with the
conversion to digital.

Leo

---
Leo Enticknap
Institute of
Communications Studies
2.35, Clothworkers' Building North
University of
Leeds
LS2 9JT
United Kingdom
My personal website [2]
My page on the
University of Leeds's website [3]
My page on academia.edu [4]


Links:
------
[1]
http://www.soundassociates.co.uk/downloads/philips_feature_CT_june2012.pdf
[2]
http://www.enticknap.net
[3] http://ics.leeds.ac.uk/staff/leo
[4]
http://leeds.academia.edu/enticknap

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