From Deseret News archives:

Making the big screen bigger

Widescreen movies have been with us for half a century

Published: Friday, Oct. 3, 2003 10:03 p.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
Fifty years ago this week, Salt Lakers attending the premiere of "The Robe" at either the Lyric Theatre downtown or the Villa Theatre on Highland Drive were the first to locally experience the new widescreen process known as CinemaScope.

It was billed as "The Modern Miracle You See Without Glasses!" — to let moviegoers know that CinemaScope was not to be confused with the 3-D films that had flooded theaters throughout much of 1953.

It was also Hollywood's latest desperate attempt to stay the tide of falling box-office receipts caused by the ever-increasing popularity of television, as the studios experimented with ways to entice customers away from the little black box and back into theaters.

Up to this point, the various ingenious methods moviemakers had tried were just gimmicks that gave the industry a short-term shot in the arm but didn't necessarily serve the art of visual storytelling.

1. A year earlier, "This Is Cinerama" had created a sensation in New York, using three synchronized projectors to project a spectacular 146-degree panoramic image on a huge curved screen, which put the viewing audience into the middle of the picture.

But the process was so expensive to install — requiring extensive remodeling of the theater auditorium — that only the largest populated cities had a Cinerama theater.

Story continues below
Still, wherever "This Is Cinerama" opened, customers flocked to experience the visual sensation it provided.

To more immediately reach out to the masses, Hollywood's quick fix was to reintroduce movies shot in 3-D, a gimmick that had first been used briefly in the 1930s for some short films.

By overlapping two images on the screen and having the viewer wear polaroid glasses, each eye would detect a separate image that appeared to give the picture depth and roundness. Polaroid glasses were a great improvement over the red-and-green glasses previously used (though were revived for the recent "Spy Kids 3-D").

Beginning with "Bwana Devil" in late 1952, and after the Vincent Price thriller "House of Wax" in April 1953, the onslaught of 3-D thrills came fast and thick. If it wasn't "a lion in your lap" or "a lover in your arms," it would be ping-pong balls or flaming arrows — anything to give the sensation of something coming right off the screen and into the audience.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image

"Lawrence of Arabia" is one of the widest of widescreen movies. Experts say that if it can't be seen in a theater, it should be seen in the widescreen format on television.

Related content
previousnext

Latest comments

Obama: More troops with deadline

Yepper's, you betcha, (as Sarah Palin would say), the same DNA is running in...

Wouldn't you think the victim would have been killed INSIDE the home if he...

Max Hall: a fixture in rivalry lore

The bottom line is no matter how much you don't like the other team you don't...

Letters: Hatred is uncalled for

I HATE THE U | 12:02 p.m. You all have similar stories because they are...

This is a really cool story, thanks for writing it 7 congrats to the family.

MWC '09 season in review

No matter what the cougs do - they will be linked to the Vegas bowl - enjoy...

JT is an excellent player and I hate when people bag on him. Yes, he has poor...

6 sons soar as Eagle Scouts

What does scouting actually have to do with being awesome?... Answer:...

Letters: Left-wing AP

'And your last sad attempt, the James Early Ray "quote" is simply a lie.' -...

"One thing you can't hide, is when you're crippled inside." John Lennon.

Advertisements