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  • I want to make a quick video on the usage of aspect ratios as a thematic device in film.

  • While the first 40 years of film were limited to one ratio for length and width of a screen,

  • modern filmmakers have several aspect ratios to choose from, and each one can have different

  • emotional effect for the viewer. Let’s look at why filmmakers choose the ratios they choose

  • and explore the emotional effect of changing aspect ratio during a film.

  • The oldest aspect ratio is the 4:3 Academy Ratio, and it lost its popularity after the

  • introduction of 16:9 ratio in the 1950’s. Directors still use this ratio sometimes,

  • though, to make the film feel like it’s from an older time period. A great example

  • is The Grand Budapest Hotel which switches to Academy when the story goes back to the 1930's**

  • The aspect ratio change is a great way to emotionally transport us to the time

  • period when this ratio was popular. We associate the aspect ratio with old timey movies, and

  • it helps pull us into the old timey style, quirkiness, manners, and culture that The

  • Grand Budapest Hotel has. 500 Days of Summer uses Polaroid square ratio

  • as a way to show a glamourized, reminiscent past.

  • This time capsule look coincides nicely with Tom’s

  • old fashioned, unrealistic view of love. Towards the end of the movie, though, this Polaroid

  • look is eventually pushed off screen as Tom realizes the expectation of this old-fashioned

  • outlook does not coincide with reality. 2.35 ratio is ultra widescreen, and it gives

  • the look of an epic big budget drama or sci-fi film. I like how Aunty Donna uses it for over-the-top drama.

  • The ratio is reserved for extremely epic movies. A movie like Napoleon Dynamite would look

  • kind of off in this extreme ratio, but a movie like Star Wars wouldn’t look nearly the

  • same without it. Portraying space is commonly associated with

  • big aspect ratio changes. Interstellar switches to IMAX footage when the shots are of space,

  • and goes back to 16:9 for shots of the spaceship. What better way to make space look bigger

  • than by literally adding to the screen? The same is done in Apollo 13 and Galaxy Quest

  • to show the huge scope of space.

  • Aspect ratio changes to add scope aren’t

  • exclusive to space movies, though. Right before the Bane vs. Batman fight in The Dark Knight

  • Rises, for example, the camera transitions to bigger IMAX footage. This change has a

  • great subconscious emotional effect. It reminds us subtly that were about to watch an intense,

  • epic scene. Hunger Games also does a good job of adding anticipation by slowly expanding

  • into IMAX footage before the fighting begins. The right Aspect Ratio can contribute to the

  • realism of a film. A scripted film that’s supposed to look like a documentary has to

  • be 16:9 or else it won’t emotionally feel like a documentary. The opening scene in The

  • Incredibles purposefully looks like 16m 4:3* ratio film, and the effect adds realism, so

  • the movie feels less like a cartoon and more like a realistic action film.

  • Catch Me If You Can cleverly uses aspect ratio change to show Frank is contained. He starts

  • on TV in the small Academy Ratio, and then he’s next shown through a small slit in

  • a wall. He is literally being squished in the frame. It gives the emotionally feeling

  • that Frank is trapped. The most ambitious aspect ratio changes are

  • when the ratio is ignored completely. Life of Pi has the fish literally jumping out of

  • the frame, and Oz the Great and Powerful does the same with a burst of flame. It’s a really

  • immersive technique and makes for a great visual.

  • Aspect Ratios have a chance to greatly contribute to the visual storytelling of a film. Whether

  • they indicate time period, intensity, or added realism, aspect ratios are another clever

  • tool at the disposal of the modern director. If you want to fully understand the style

  • of a film, the film’s aspect ratio is a great frame of reference. Thanks for watching.

I want to make a quick video on the usage of aspect ratios as a thematic device in film.

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