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Attractions Management
2016 issue 4

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Leisure Management - Ang Lee

People profiles

Ang Lee


Film director

Ang Lee is the first to use the technology in the cinema, though it has been seen in theme parks
Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk was shot at 120fps, creating super high definition, high clarity images
Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk was shot at 120fps, creating super high definition, high clarity images
Lee explains how he made the film at the IBC Show in Amsterdam

Very few people will have yet had the opportunity to experience footage shot at 120 frames per second (fps) – perhaps just those who’ve been on Disney’s brand new Soarin’ Around the World rides. Oscar-winning film director Ang Lee is changing all that, as his pioneering use of the technology may signal a new way of filming for both the cinema and attractions industries. If dark rides, 4D cinemas and flying theatres one day employ this process more widely, visitor immersion could be lifted to a whole new level.

Lee’s new film, Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk, is the first movie to be shot at 120fps, in 4K 3D and with a screen luminance of 28 foot-lamberts – a technique that brings extreme clarity and almost hyperreal quality to the images for an immersive digital experience. Based on the book by Ben Fountain, the film tells the story of a 19-year-old soldier who suffers flashbacks from his time in Iraq whilst attending a Thanksgiving Day football game.

“4K, 3D, 120fps capture gives extraordinary clarity to a film,” says Lee, who also directed Brokeback Mountain and Life of Pi. “It allows us to explore new ground in cinema and engage the audience on a more emotional level.”

There are challenges, Lee says, such as the actors being unable to wear make up and the ability to see more than ever before in the faces and expressions of the cast.

“We could see everything,” says Lee. “That’s the scary part – you see the acting. The way we are used to actors looking at each other looks dead and if you try to act, it looks like you are trying to act. The film language has to change. I didn’t have much choice but to stick close to Billy Lynn. You feel how they feel, see the thoughts in their eyes.”

Data capture
At September’s IBC show in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, clips from the Sony TriStar release were shown to a live audience, powered by two Christie Mirage 4KLHs projectors, with video processing bandwidth of 1.2 Gigapixels per second and the world’s brightest laser system. 7thSense’s Delta Infinity media server handled the demanding playback requirements.

Lee’s editor on the film, Tim Squyres, has pointed out that not all movie theatres have the ability to screen the film this way, but Billy Lynn can still be released in 2D 24fps, for example.

“The normal paradigm is you shoot a bunch of frames and then project those frames in the movie theatre,” says Squyres. “With this, it’s more like we’re capturing data. We’re shooting with a 360-degree shutter and using that data we can create all kinds of different formats and all kinds of different looks.”

In 2013, Peter Jackson filmed The Hobbit at 48fps, considered a huge jump from the industry standard of 24fps.


Originally published in Attractions Management 2016 issue 4

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