darthrage
01-13-2010, 04:35 AM
I was just watching the Big Screen Edition Blu-Ray of ROTF recently and I still find it amazing how crystal clear those IMAX scenes are. They make the Forest Fight and Devastator scenes feel so much larger than life.
Some of the standard scenes in ROTF are kind of grainy but still look good but once it jumps to IMAX, it is almost like they use an entirely new clean film stock because the picture quality is so amazingly crisp. And its great that the the screen opens up so that you can see more.
Anyways, I'm just hoping that Michael Bay decides to shoot all the major action sequences for TF3 in IMAX in its entirety. The Devastator scene did get a bit annoying when it jumped between the construction vehicles and Ramon with Simmons and then the black (widescreen) bars kept appearing and re-appearing.
Typically a Transformers movie comes with 3 major action scenes and a bunch of smaller ones. So in the case of ROTF, they only had a full action scene in the middle to be filmed in IMAX. Perhaps, they can spend less money on military involvement and then spend more time and money getting those scenes captured with IMAX cameras.
In the words of Michael Bay, " It'll be bitchin'"
Some of the standard scenes in ROTF are kind of grainy but still look good but once it jumps to IMAX, it is almost like they use an entirely new clean film stock because the picture quality is so amazingly crisp. And its great that the the screen opens up so that you can see more.
Anyways, I'm just hoping that Michael Bay decides to shoot all the major action sequences for TF3 in IMAX in its entirety. The Devastator scene did get a bit annoying when it jumped between the construction vehicles and Ramon with Simmons and then the black (widescreen) bars kept appearing and re-appearing.
Typically a Transformers movie comes with 3 major action scenes and a bunch of smaller ones. So in the case of ROTF, they only had a full action scene in the middle to be filmed in IMAX. Perhaps, they can spend less money on military involvement and then spend more time and money getting those scenes captured with IMAX cameras.
In the words of Michael Bay, " It'll be bitchin'"