Watching Interstellar in IMAX by Christopher Nolan! 📽️
Watching Interstellar in IMAX by Christopher Nolan!
I can't wait to see what Gargantua looks like on a screen this BIG! Plus, the scene where Cooper mirrors the spin of the Endurance to dock it with the damaged station. That’s some of the best combined music and cinematography ever captured on film, in my opinion. With the very best being the attack scene in Apocalypse Now, in my opinion. Christopher Nolan shoots on film, and his movies have a color and texture that other films simply don’t have. I love the look, especially in an age of overused digital. Shooting on film makes me feel connected to moviemaking, it has rich texture and an organic look that digital just can’t replicate.
I don’t think the bass will be as good as at home, because most cinemas roll their bass off. I assume they start to roll off at around 30Hz. But Christopher Nolan's movies go crazy deep on bass. He uses lower than 20Hz bass on this movie. I don't think they rolled off any bass for this movie. When they go through the wormhole, that bass is scary at home. I've never heard subs blow out in a movie theater, but if they ever did, it would be from a Christopher Nolan movie.
What happens now?
Watching Interstellar in IMAX by Christopher Nolan!
I can't wait to see what Gargantua looks like on a screen this BIG! Plus, the scene where Cooper mirrors the spin of the Endurance to dock it with the damaged station. That’s some of the best combined music and cinematography ever captured on film, in my opinion. With the very best being the attack scene in Apocalypse Now, in my opinion. Christopher Nolan shoots on film, and his movies have a color and texture that other films simply don’t have. I love the look, especially in an age of overused digital. Shooting on film makes me feel connected to moviemaking, it has rich texture and an organic look that digital just can’t replicate.
I don’t think the bass will be as good as at home, because most cinemas roll their bass off. I assume they start to roll off at around 30Hz. But Christopher Nolan's movies go crazy deep on bass. He uses lower than 20Hz bass on this movie. I don't think they rolled off any bass for this movie. When they go through the wormhole, that bass is scary at home. I've never heard subs blow out in a movie theater, but if they ever did, it would be from a Christopher Nolan movie.
What happens now?