rana wrote:
NewDeep wrote:
newdeep wrote:
There's not a single shot in open-matte Sholay that appears to have any edges worth "chopping off" or having "unnecessary info" to be matted out.
Actually there is... one shot -- Sanjeev chasing Amjad -- Here, the horse dummy can be clearly made out from the bottom of the screenshot -- this indeed should have been matted out. There's also the appearance of road in the bottom right corner, which should also have been matted out.
This one shot sure shows that it was composed for wide screen with extra info that was supposed to be blanked out. But, what about other shots, where 4:3, with extra info at the top and at the bottom, seems to be more complete composition.
Anyway, assuming that SHOLAY was meant for widescreen and also assuming that it was shot using 70 mm film, question arises why shoot on larger film area of 70 mm where useful info is only one half of it, easily captured on a 35 mm scope with almost same (film area) quality. May be, for 4 ch sound ?? Also, what's 70mm film's unstretched AR ??
The above ss shows studio artifacts at the bottom and hence implying that bottom and perhaps top too director intended to matt it out.
But, consider another shot (any volunteers to post it ??) in the song Yeh Dosti where Amitabh just starts his lines, the full frame (4:3) is a perfect frame and in 2.35:1, Dharmender's face and facial expressions are totally cut off.
So, what was the director's intention ?? I say, Director intended nothing. Just whatever available for whatever AR demanded by the customer.