Jurassic Park was shot using the standard Academy Aperture on 35mm film, utilizing a spherical lens format.
The year 1993 was a watershed moment for cinema sound. Jurassic Park was the official launch vehicle for .
These versions are not meant to replace high-definition studio releases, but rather to act as a historical time capsule. They allow film scholars and enthusiasts to experience Jurassic Park exactly as it was when it first roared into cinema history. Jurassic Park was shot using the standard Academy
: It aims to show the entire uncropped 35mm film frame, often revealing more visual information than intended for theaters. Theatrical Cinema DTS Audio
Jurassic Park - O Parque dos Dinossauros (Jurassic Park, 1993) ************* FILME ************* VERSÃO OPEN-MATTE/35mm ********** Internet Archive These versions are not meant to replace high-definition
You see more height, such as the full height of the T-Rex or more jungle foliage. "Superwide" Artifacts:
– The Foundation
In an open-matte presentation, the black bars typically seen at the top and bottom of a widescreen film are removed, and the top and bottom of the original 35mm frame are revealed. This means viewers are seeing more of the image than was originally visible in most theaters, often showcasing more of the environment, actors' bodies, or digital effects.
Occasional "glitches" like or cables that were never intended to be seen by the audience. Theatrical Cinema DTS Audio Jurassic Park - O
Jurassic Park was famously the very first movie to feature DTS audio in theaters. The DTS format stored high-quality, multi-channel digital audio on separate CD-ROM discs that were synchronized to the projector via a timecode printed directly onto the 35mm film.