Current:Home > My"Oppenheimer" 70mm film reels are 600 pounds — and reach IMAX's "outer limit" due to the movie's 3-hour runtime -Ascend Finance Compass
"Oppenheimer" 70mm film reels are 600 pounds — and reach IMAX's "outer limit" due to the movie's 3-hour runtime
View
Date:2025-04-13 01:31:42
Director Christopher Nolan recently revealed "Oppenheimer" is his longest film yet. Now, we know just how long the film is — literally. The movie is set to run in 30 IMAX theaters, and the reel of 70mm film is a whopping 11 miles long, Nolan told The Associated Press. It also weighs 600 pounds.
"Oppenheimer" will premiere Friday worldwide and be shown on standard screens as well as in IMAX. But Nolan said he recommends seeing the film at an IMAX theater. Before digital recording became the norm, movies were usually recorded on 35mm film. IMAX movies printed on 70mm film, however, have a wider and taller aspect ratio and are projected onto a larger screen.
In a May interview with Total Film, Nolan said it was his longest movie yet, revealing it was "kissing three hours," which is slightly longer than his 2014 movie "Interstellar," which runs about 2 hours and 47 minutes.
Previously, IMAX platters — which hold the large reels of film being projected — could only hold enough film for a 150-minute runtime, Nolan told Collider's Steve Weintraub earlier this month. When he made "Interstellar," the director asked IMAX if they could make the platters wider to accommodate the longer film.
Nolan said he had to go back to IMAX again when he was creating "Oppenheimer."
"I went to them and I said, 'Okay, I've got a 180-page script. That's a three-hour movie on the nose. Can it be done?' We looked at it, they looked at the platters, and they came to the conclusion that it could just be done," he said. "They're telling me this is the absolute limit because now the arm that holds the platter went right up against it. So, this, I think, is finally the outer limit of running time for an IMAX film print."
Sequences of "Oppenheimer" were shot with an IMAX camera so some scenes will be able to expand to fit the wider IMAX screen, according to the movie theater company. Nolan employed a similar tactic of shooting some scenes in IMAX and others in a different format with his previous film "The Dark Knight."
The movie is about J. Robert Oppenheimer, known as the "father of the atomic bomb," and parts of it are in black and white. Because of that, the first black and white IMAX film stock was created by Kodak and Fotokem, according to the AP.
"We shot a lot of our hair and makeup tests using black and white. And then we would go to the IMAX film projector at CityWalk [Theater] and project it there," Nolan told the AP. "I've just never seen anything like it. To see such a massive black-and-white film image? It's just a wonderful thing."
- In:
- Hollywood
- Christopher Nolan
- Oppenheimer
- IMAX
- Entertainment
Caitlin O'Kane is a digital content producer covering trending stories for CBS News and its good news brand, The Uplift.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Historic landmarks eyed for demolition get boost from Hollywood A-listers
- Hunter Biden returning to court for arraignment on federal gun charges
- Bear attacks, injures woman in Montana west of Glacier park near Canadian border
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- 13 Halloween-Inspired Outfits That Are Just as Spooky and Stylish as Costumes
- Meet Jellybean, a new court advocate in Wayne County, Michigan. She keeps victims calm.
- Plans to accommodate transgender swimmers at a World Cup meet scrapped because of lack of entries
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- EU announces plans to better protect its sensitive technologies from foreign snooping
Ranking
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- Elon Musk facing defamation lawsuit in Texas over posts that falsely identified man in protest
- 'Wild 'N Out' star Jacky Oh's cause of death revealed
- EU demands answers from Poland about visa fraud allegations
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Phil Nevin out as Los Angeles Angels manager as playoff drought continues
- Taylor Swift is getting the marketing boost she never needed out of her Travis Kelce era
- How did we come to live extremely online? Mommy bloggers, says one writer
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Consumer watchdog agency's fate at Supreme Court could nix other agencies too
Part of Ohio’s GOP-backed K-12 education overhaul will take effect despite court order
A Florida death row inmate convicted of killing a deputy and 2 others dies in prison, officials say
'Most Whopper
Sofía Vergara's Suncare-First Beauty Line Is Toty Everything You Need to Embrace Your Belleza
Current Twins seek to end Minnesota's years-long playoff misery: 'Just win one'
If You're Not Buying Sojos Sunglasses, You're Spending Too Much