Third Dimension Movies And E X P A N D E D Screen (1953)

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THREE-DIMENSIONAL MOTION PICTURES T_TJ ture and Television Engineers. (Nor have Cinerama's sponsors ever accepted repeated invitations to present a paper on it before the Society.) There are at least eight major technical flaws in the Cinerama process, none of which admits of ready FOOTAGE COUNTER on the Cinerama projection head, with a part of the syn chro mechanism shown at the top. or easy remedy, and all of which were glaringly visible even at the first commercial performance when equip ment was still factory-new, and operation supervised by inventors and engineers in addition to projectionists. 1. Horizontal lines are seldom straight. (They are projected onto a curved screen, which curves them.) The pretzel-like effect on railroad tracks was almost