Ali Bhai, can this be made a sticky? It has valuable info on how a movie "Seven Brides For Seven Brothers" was shot simultaneously for two different scopes - 2.55 and 1.85 -- the way the scenes were composed for the two separate scopes is very interesting to note -- and this will interest Sholay fans who believe in separate shoots for 70mm and 35mm
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Seven Brides For Seven Brothers (the movie that inspired Satte Pe Satta) was shot simultaneously in two scopes. Check the framing of the same scenes for different scopes at
http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film/DVDCompare10/7_brides.htm
Gary Tooze @ DVDBeaver.com wrote:
The 2-disc SE DVD contains two versions of the film.
First the 2.55:1 cinemascope version...
The second is the "notorious" flat version, shot side by side with the scope version, and was a studio back-up, in case scope turned out to be a fad. The OAR was 1.85:1, but here its been cropped into 1.78:1 (16x9)...
Rewind - DVDCompare.net wrote:
"Back in 1953 when Seven Brides commenced production, Cinemascope was still a novelty, and just a fraction of theaters were equipped to show movies shot with the super-wide lens. Worried MGM executives thus demanded director Stanley Donen film an alternate version of Seven Brides to ensure the musical could play in any theater and reach the largest possible audience. Such an edict, however, put enormous pressure on Donen, who needed to compose two different shots for every camera setup to accommodate the vastly different aspect ratios (2.55:1 and 1.77:1). Ironically, by the time Seven Brides premiered in 1954, almost every theater in America could project Cinemascope films, and the alternate version was never commercially shown." (Thanks to David Krauss of digitallyobsessed.com for this info.)