sengh_15 wrote:
90% of the cinema projectors do. If lens are not changed it results of a squished picture.
You have your facts twisted around. All projectors (analog) used in commercial theaters have a native aspect ratio of 4:3. It is for anamorphic (cinemascope, panavision) films that they have to use an anamorphic lens to unsqueeze the picture. If you are seeing a squished picture of a 4:3 movie, then it is because the projectionist is either too lazy to remove the anamorphic lens or is most probably simply a moron and does not know his job too well.
sengh_15 wrote:
My local cinema didnt play it because they didnt have the lens to play 4:3; and if they did it would not fit the whole screen so it would have to be played in a smaller screen.
For the last time, please understand how this works. First of all, I personally viewed the film on a huge, 2.35:1 screen and the picture was not distorted in any way at all, thus 2.35:1 prints do exist. Secondly, if the screen in a theater is 2.35:1 then ofcourse a 4:3 film will display a smaller picture. Just think of it as watching 4:3 material on a widescreen (16:9) television with the black bars on the sides. Finally, there is no lens that can make a 4:3 picture fill a 2.35:1 screen without either cropping the top and bottom of the picture and/or without distorting the picture and showing a squished picture.