“Almost like a real web site”
 

IN7OMM.COM
Search | Contact
News | e-News |
Rumour Mill | Stories
Foreign Language
in70mm.com auf Deutsch

WHAT'S ON IN 7OMM?

7OMM FESTIVAL
Todd-AO Festival
KRRR! 7OMM Seminar
GIFF 70, Gentofte
Oslo 7OMM Festival
Widescreen Weekend

TODD-AO
Premiere | Films
People | Equipment
Library | Cinemas
Todd-AO Projector
Distortion Correcting

PANAVISION
Ultra Panavision 70
Super Panavision 70
 

VISION, SCOPE & RAMA
1926 Natural Vision
1929 Grandeur
1930 Magnifilm
1930 Realife
1930 Vitascope
1952 Cinerama
1953 CinemaScope
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 | Super Dimension 70Early Large Format
7OMM Premiere in Chronological Order

7OMM FILM & CINEMA

Australia | Brazil
Canada | Denmark
England | France
Germany | Iran
Mexico | Norway
Sweden | Turkey
USA

LIBRARY
7OMM Projectors
People | Eulogy
65mm/70mm Workshop
The 7OMM Newsletter
Back issue | PDF
Academy of the WSW

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:
• To record the history of the large format movies and the 70mm cinemas as remembered by the people who worked with the films. Both during making and during running the films in projection rooms and as the audience, looking at the curved screen.
in70mm.com, a unique internet based magazine, with articles about 70mm cinemas, 70mm people, 70mm films, 70mm sound, 70mm film credits, 70mm history and 70mm technology. Readers and fans of 70mm are always welcome to contribute.

Disclaimer | Updates
Support us
Testimonials
Table of Content
 

 
 
Extracts and longer parts of in70mm.com may be reprinted with the written permission from the editor.
Copyright © 1800 - 2070. All rights reserved.

Visit biografmuseet.dk about Danish cinemas

 

"The Big Fisherman"
Filmed in Super Panavision 70

Read more at
in70mm.com
The 70mm Newsletter
Written by: Thomas Hauerslev Issue 51 - December 1997
After publication of the 70mm film list in issue 50, I received several e-mails about the photography of "The Big Fisherman". I admit to have made an error. Thanks to many readers and their wealth of knowledge the error has been corrected. I called Panavision and got in touch with Don Earl (in charge of Panavision 65mm department) and Takuo (Tak) Miyagishima (Sr. Vice president engineering) and they both confirmed "Fisherman" was filmed in [Super] Panavison and that it was the first non-anamorphic 65mm filmed with Panavision equipment (Followed by "West Side Story" and "Exodus"). Additionally "South Pacific" was a Todd-AO movie, and the Panavision main title credit was due to the printer lenses for making 35mm reduction prints.
 
More in 70mm reading:

Motion pictures photographed in Super Panavision 70 & Panavision System 65

Internet link:

E-mails about "The Big Fisherman"

 
In your list of large format films you have "The Big Fisherman" listed as Ultra Panavision 70. There seems to be some controversy about this film. I faxed you a copy of an ad that appeared on January 26, 1960 for the opening of "The Big Fisherman". As you can see, it was advertised in Panavision 70. I know that this theatre never had Ultra Panavision 70 projection lenses. By the way they had Bauer U2s.

Bob Throop
 
 
Do you know about the controversy of the format for "The Big Fisherman"? It seems even though Panavision´s official list declares it to have been filmed in Ultra Panavision, there are some very reliable sources that assure me that it was in spherical Super Panavision 70.

Scott Marshall
 
 
I have always thought it was a spherical 65mm film. The inventory elements list it as 65mm, but no mention of any kind of anamorphics.

Theo E. Gluck
 
 
SMPTE Journal also reported that "The Big Fisherman" was photographed with spherical lenses. And yesterday, I called film format historian Rick Mitchell and asked his opinion. He believes that MGM had exclusive rights to the anamorphic 65mm process at that time. This would be yet another reason why it would be filmed with spherical lenses.

Dan Sherlock
 
 
In the mid 70s, BMW made a 10 minute Super Panavision 70 short called "Auto-E-Motion". This film was shown for many years in the BMW museum Munich at their own 70mm theatre. "The Big Fisherman" is noted as a Ultra Panavision 70 picture. This trade name was not introduced until 1962 with "Mutiny on the Bounty". Camera 65 could not be correct, because a few years ago Panavision agreed with me, that "Fisherman" was shot with spherical. In fact "The Big Fisherman" was photographed in Super Panavision 70. I know that most sources say Camera 65, was the photographic process, but Panavision has to know better. "South Pacific" is mentioned as a Todd-AO movie. Of course, this musical was announced in this process. But perhaps an appendix should be made that, in fact, "South Pacific" was the first movie shot in Super Panavision 70, although this process was never officially named.

Hans-Joachim Heuel, Bielefeld, Germany
 
 
In thinking about your question regarding "The Big Fisherman" I can only add this information. If someone is looking at a 65mm camera negative and it is a flat (2,21:1) image, that does not mean that it wasn't originally an (2,75:1) anamorphic 1,25 squeezed original. As we all know, many Ultra Panavision 70 and MGM Camera 65 original negatives were duped into flat 70 format (2,21:1) like "Ben Hur". Although information is typically scarce, this happened primarily because most theatre owners did not want to buy a very expensive Ultra Panavision projection lens for what might amount to one or two presentations in a lifetime. So there were times when anamorphic 70 films were presented in flat 70. Ironically, Cinerama theatres did not own anamorphic lenses for 70mm, they let "Screen-Stretch" unsqueeze the image, although the objects in the center of the image must have looked thin.

The only way I know how to determine whether or not any printed image was originally photographed in an anamorphic process is to view the images and look for "extra-focal images". "Extra-focal images" are those images which are very out of focus that have a singular shape. When those images are photographed with a scope lens, it will distort the "extra-focal image" in the opposite direction of its compression. In other words, an out of focus car headlight photographed with a 2:1 scope lens will look like a vertical ellipse. Now with a 1,25:1 squeeze of Ultra Panavision these "extra-focal images" will look "egg shaped" and only slightly oblong. If there is no anamorphosis involved and an image is photographed with a flat lens (i.e. Super Panavision, Todd-AO) these "extra-focal images" will look like perfect circles.

PS Bob Harris and James Katz are working for Universal. They are working on a restoration of "Rear Window". It was originally 1,66:1 flat and that is how the restoration is being done, no 65mm.

John O'Callaghan, Los Angeles, USA
 
 
29. december 2013

Hi Thomas, Just looking at different pages on your site and I came across "The Big Fisherman" page. I was talking to
Tak at Panavision many years ago and he told me that Lee Garmes shot the entire film with a 40mm spherical lens. Tak said that he thought it was the best film ever shot in Super Panavision 70, interesting! Happy New Year! Best, Robert Weisgerber
 
 
 
 
Go: back - top - back issues - news index
Updated 21-01-24