Moving Images, Understanding Media

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152 Moving Images: Making Movies, Understanding Media

the meantime, producers will also ask: “What is the frame that the audience
wants to see?”

Managing the Ratio

When applied to television sets that are physically bounded by their 1.33:1
ratio screens, the wider aspect ratio posed a problem. Initially, movies were
cut to fi t into the bounds of the screen. Th us, for many decades, many fi lms
being projected on television would not show a signifi cant portion of the
true image of the fi lm. Eventually, this corruption of the actual creation
of the fi lmmakers was compensated by black bars that mask the screen to
duplicate the authentic aspect ratio of the movie and to allow the entire true
image to be seen.
Th e most signifi cant twenty-fi rst century development in the evolution
of aspect ratios has been to alter the standard size of the television set. A
half-century ago, the movie industry responded to pressure from the newly
emergent television phenomenon by making its screen bigger. Fift y years
later, the opposite eff ect has occurred. First, the signifi cant increase in overall
television size, improvements in stereo surround sound, and the sale of movies
through the medium of DVDs and BluRays transformed living rooms into a
reduced version of the movie theater. Next, technical developments such as
high-defi nition television, or HDTV, increased the sharpness of television
viewing, and along with these innovations came a push for a widened aspect
ratio. Now, it is television that has made its screens bigger with the advent of
16:9 aspect ratio high-defi nition home theater monitors, which have become
an international standard.
Not only has the moviegoing experience been shrunk to the living room
(or bedroom or bathroom or family minivan), but motion pictures are being

Figure 4-34 Watching
motion pictures on a tiny
screen. (Courtesy Kendelyn
Ouellette)

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