Movie changes aspect ratio

>movie changes aspect ratio

When has this ever happened?

Grand Budapest Hotel, off the top of my head.

Lars Von Trier?

When you watch a movie filmed in imax (like interstellar)

Interstellar

Scott Pilgrim vs The World
The Grand Budapest Hotel (iirc)

I guess I never noticed. Or just don't recall.

Napoléon (1927)

the open-curtains-to-three-screens thing is really cool.

Ugh this pissed me off. For the first half I didn't notice it was happening but once I noticed it it was always on my mind.

A serious man

most imax movies do this because they wanna save money and film all the "boring" shots like dialogue in standard and then shoot the beauty shots and action sequences in imax

Mommy

>character starts thinking heavily about something
> random person tries to get their attention
>"SIR! SIR!"

It's impossible not to notice in Grand Budapest unless you just haven't seen it.

Hunger Games: Catching Fire

None.

They do this in that new show legion a few times. I can't ever remember seeing a tv do it. I guess it trying really hard to be arthouse or something.

Hunger Games

I am not Madam Bovary

TDKR had this a lot

Legion did this last episode and it annoyed the piss out of me

The bigger reason is that imax cameras are super loud, that's why Nolan didn't use them exclusively for TDKR; hard to film quiet dialogue when there's a fucking jet engine on set.

I'm putty sure Neil Breen has done this a couple of times

The Force Awakens in Imax. Millennium Falcon /TIE chase took up full screen.

Mommy.

>Movie has an aspect ratio
>Movie exists in a physical sense
>Movie isn't just a speculative thought in a dead mans mind
Is true art dead?

>Movie changes frame rates

In Life of Pi a fish literally jumps over the letterboxing. Also in Oz the Great and Powerful, a guy breathes fire over the letterboxing as well.

It's fucking weird and rips you out of the movie instantly.

The proton beams in Ghostbusters reboot did that, too.