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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CineramaCinerama - Wikipedia

    Cinerama. Cinerama is a widescreen process that originally projected images simultaneously from three synchronized 35mm projectors onto a huge, deeply curved screen, subtending 146-degrees of arc. [clarification needed] The trademarked process was marketed by the Cinerama corporation.

    • Holiday in Spain

      Scent of Mystery is a 1960 American mystery film, the first...

  2. www.siff.net › cinema › cinema-venuesSIFF Cinema Downtown

    Experience three-strip Cinerama films on a 97-foot curved screen at SIFF Cinema Downtown, one of only two operating cinemas in the world with this capability. Enjoy blockbuster studio films, specialty festivals, arthouse cinema, and local concessions at this historic venue in the heart of Downtown Seattle.

  3. Jan 18, 2018 · The photographer Weegee contributed to a night-on-the-town montage in New York. In a truly thrilling sequence in Philadelphia, the heavy Cinerama camera is placed on a fire truck racing through ...

  4. www.cinerama.comCinerama

    Cinerama is a historic geodesic dome that offers a truly immersive theatrical experience, free from distractions. It is a temple to an art form, where true movie lovers can sit in the dark, together, and worship.

  5. Cinerama, in motion pictures, a process in which three synchronized movie projectors each project one-third of the picture on a wide, curving screen. Many viewers believe that the screen, which thus annexes their entire field of vision, gives a sense of reality unmatched by the flat screen.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Widescreen movies promoted as being presented in Cinerama from 1963 onward, including It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) and 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), were mostly shot on single camera 70mm and projected as such, even if on a curved screen. Despite its brief heyday, Cinerama’s influence was enormous; as John Belton wrote in ...

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  8. Learn about the history and evolution of Cinerama, the innovative wide-screen system that revolutionized film making in the 1950s and 1960s. See photos of Cinerama prints, cameras, projectors, and the people who made it possible.

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