“Almost like a real web site”
 

IN7OMM.COM
Search | Contact
News | e-News
Rumour Mill
Foreign Language
Auf Deutsch

WHAT'S ON IN 7OMM?

7OMM FESTIVAL
Karlsruhe | Gentofte
Krnov | Varnsdorf
Banská Bystrica
Oslo | Bradford

TODD-AO PROCESS
Films | Premiere
People | Equipment
Library | Cinemas
Distortion Correcting
DP70 / AAII Projector
 

VISION, SCOPE & RAMA
1895 Bioscop
1926 Natural Vision
1929 Grandeur
1930 Magnifilm
1930 Realife
1930 Vitascope
1952 Cinerama
1953 CinemaScope
1953 Panavison
1954 VistaVision
1954 Perspecta
1955 Todd-AO
1955 Circle Vision 360
1956 CinemaScope 55
1957 Ultra Panavision 70
1958 Cinemiracle
1958 Kinopanorama
1959 Super Panavision 70
1959 Super Technirama 70
1960 Smell-O-Vision
1961 Sovscope 70
1962
Cinerama 360
1962 MCS-70
1963 70mm Blow Up
1963 Circarama
1963 Circlorama
1966 Dimension 150
1966
Stereo-70
1967 DEFA 70
1967 Pik-A-Movie
1970 IMAX / Omnimax
1974 Cinema 180
1974 SENSURROUND
1976 Dolby Stereo
1984 Showscan
1984 Swissorama
1986 iWERKS
1989 ARRI 765
1990 CDS
1994 DTS / Datasat
2001 Super Dimension 70
2018 Magellan 65

Various Large format | 70mm to 3-strip | 3-strip to 70mm | Specialty Large Format | Special Effects in 65mm | ARC-120 | Early Large Format
7OMM Premiere in Chronological Order

7OMM ON EARTH

Australia | Brazil | Canada | China | Denmark | England | France | Germany | Holland | India | Iran | Israel | Ireland | Mexico | Norway | Poland |  Russia | Spain | Sweden | Turkey | USA |

LIBRARY
Interview | Eulogy
Academy of the WSW
7OMM Projectors
The 7OMM Newsletter
Back issue | Stories
70mm Workshop

7OMM NEWS
2026 | 2025 | 2024
2023 | 2022 | 2021
2020 | 2019 | 2018
2017 | 2016 | 2015
2014 | 2013 | 2012
2011 | 2010 | 2009
2008 | 2007 | 2006
2005 | 2004 | 2003
2002 | 2001 | 2000
1999 | 1998 | 1997
1996 | 1995 | 1994
 

in70mm.com Mission:
• in70mm.com is a free magazine-styled website dedicated to the promotion and preservation of any kind of 70mm film projection, a high-resolution film format. The website serves as a hub for contributing enthusiasts, filmmakers, and historians interested in the technical aspects, history, and cultural significance of 70mm film.

Disclaimer | About
Support us | Staff
Testimonials
 

 
Extracts and longer parts of in70mm.com may be reprinted with the written permission from the editor.

Copyright © 1896 - 2070. All rights reserved.
 


Visit biografmuseet.dk about Danish cinemas
 

"The Hateful Eight" 70MM Film Print and Projection Details

Read more at
in70mm.com
The 70mm Newsletter
Written by: Paul Rayton in conversation with Boston Light and Sound's Chapin Cutler Date: 01.01.2016
"The Hateful Eight" 7OMM print in the DP70 film gate. Image Thomas Hauerslev

• all 70mm prints (for platter houses) will be shipped out entirely assembled, none will be assembled in the venues. The prints are being built up by a selected crew working near Magic Mountain (Santa Clarita), CA.

• the prints will be in one single transport case, custom made for the show. A large, flat case, similar to those sometimes used to transport Imax 70mm prints, back in the day.

• even though the show will have an intermission, there will be only ONE ROLL of film. In other words, the intermission is built into the movie, with 12 minutes of black film (and DTS [Datasat] timecode printed in it) in the middle of the built-up platter print. There is no audio during the intermission, but there is a 45-second "entr'acte" music bit at the beginning of the second half of the show.

• the film print itself weighs about 220 pounds.

• with the shipping box, the total shipping weight is 350 pounds.

• the total running time is a little over 3 hours, including the intermission.
 
More in 70mm reading:

Quentin Tarantino's "The Hateful Eight" in Ultra Panavision 70

The Forgotten Craft: How Intermission Sequences Were Designed to Enhance 70mm Epics

Movie Roadshows: A History and Filmography of Reserved-Seat Limited Showings, 1911-1973

in70mm.com News

Peripheral Vision, Scopes, Dimensions and Panoramas

in70mm.com's Library

Presented on the big screen in 7OMM

7OMM and Cinema Across the World

Now showing in 70mm in a theatre near you!

70mm Retro - Festivals and Screenings
 
Schauburg, Karlsruhe 7OMM test material for The Hateful Eight. Image Herbert Born

• BLSI tracked down about 120 projectors, including 20 from Cinemeccanica and some Simplex XL 70’s. About 90 of the machines are Century JJ’s.

• all the platters are Christie AW 3 R’s converted to 70 mm.

• the projectors being sent out are 70mm ONLY. Most 35mm-specific parts for allowing them to run that gage are removed and stored. This was to minimize the chances for accidentally flipping a roller (etc.) into a 35mm mode, or have a too large / too small loop hitting somewhere, as potential causes of scratching. All the systems will have an on board PTR film cleaner.

• Larry Shaw from BL&S had to commission about 125 different parts as they are no longer being made by the original suppliers.

• they had to commission a significant number of new primary lenses, taking an educated guess at the number of specific focal lengths which would be needed.
 
 
7OMM print #72 shipped in cardboard boxes, for Imperial Bio, Copenhagen, Denmark. Image Alan Lyman

• they also had to have over 120 of the 1.25X anamorphic attachments built; some are based on the design of the anamorphic lens developed for d-cinema by ISCO, but are not identical. There is another design for longer throws and can be used in the reverse direction, i.e. as in the "reverse anamorphic" mode sometimes used by drive-ins with long throws.


• lamphouses are all from equipment sent into premature retirement when the digital juggernaut hit a few years ago. New reflectors were made for many of them.

• all the equipment that is shipped out to venues is on temporary install basis. The gear is scheduled to be taken out following the run. (This does not apply to venues which have pre-existing 70mm projection equipment, obviously!)

• FotoKem is producing the prints.

• BL&S is lining up projectionists to work through this run. They are contacting folks with film projection experience by approaching local Unions to see who might be available.
 
 

"The Hateful Eight" 70mm 1,25x ISCO projection lenses

 
ISCO Germany Widescreen Attachement 1,25x S anamorphic projection lens. Modified to have threads on the back. Sent an adapter to reduce down to a standard 2" lens barrel. Image by Stephan Shelley
 
 
ISCO Germany Widescreen Attachement 1,25x S anamorphic projection lens. Modified to have threads on the back. Sent an adapter to reduce down to a standard 2" lens barrel. Image by Stephan Shelley
 
 
 
"Was not able to use the prime lens BL&S sent. Image was too large for porthole. For regular 70mm on this screen we use a Kollmorgan 4" lens barrel and 4" magnicom. I was able to collapse the magnicom enough and put the 1.25x lens on the front. weighs in at around 25 pounds."

Image by Stephan Shelley
 
 
Close-up of vintage Ultra Panavision 70 projection lens. By Born, Schauburg
 
 
Anamorphic adapter on the DP70 at the Imperial Bio in Copenhagen, Denmark. Image Thomas Hauerslev
 
 
   

65mm editing table

 
70mm editing table made by Prevost in Italy. Pix test done prior to giving the machine to Quentin Tarantino for editing.

Both the 15 perf 70mm and 5 perf 70mm modern flatbeds (the only two to ever exist) were destroyed last year. They literally ripped them apart and threw them into a dumpster.

However, there was a rusty old 70mm 5 perf unit found after an exhaustive search. It appears to be a unit from the '50's. I didn't get much detail on the make, but it was completely re-built and is fully functional. This is the unit Quentin used to build his reel's for The Hateful Eight.

It has a mirror hanging over the unit that reflects down onto the curved screen. It's pretty beastly, but man what a cool unit!
 
 
   
Go: back - top - back issues - news index
Updated 21-12-25