2015-06-29, 08:45 AM
I watched the 3DBD over the weekend and I spotted something that I haven't seen mentioned elsewhere.
During the scene at the beginning of the movie where Hammond visits Grant and Sattler in their trailer and is talking about lawyers, the 3DBD is cropped so badly that Hammond is partially cut off by the right edge of the frame. At the point where he says "...they insist on outside opinions" a fake camera pan seems to have been added that gets Hammond back fully in shot. It looks as if the camera operator realised that Richard Attenborough wasn't in the correct position and then shifted the camera accordingly but, as far as I can tell, this pan is not present in any other release.
This raises the questions; why correct the framing mid-shot? And most importantly; why crop the movie so badly in the first place that you have to make digital alterations to compensate for it?
I guess this technically makes the 3DBD a pan-and-scan version.
During the scene at the beginning of the movie where Hammond visits Grant and Sattler in their trailer and is talking about lawyers, the 3DBD is cropped so badly that Hammond is partially cut off by the right edge of the frame. At the point where he says "...they insist on outside opinions" a fake camera pan seems to have been added that gets Hammond back fully in shot. It looks as if the camera operator realised that Richard Attenborough wasn't in the correct position and then shifted the camera accordingly but, as far as I can tell, this pan is not present in any other release.
This raises the questions; why correct the framing mid-shot? And most importantly; why crop the movie so badly in the first place that you have to make digital alterations to compensate for it?
I guess this technically makes the 3DBD a pan-and-scan version.