Entertainment advertising itself as having IMAX In the US, IMAX has mostly been used for specialty applications. The expense and logistical challenges of producing and presenting IMAX films have led to approximately 40 minutes shorter running times than conventional films. Most are documentaries suited for institutional venues such as museums and
science centers. IMAX cameras have been used while orbiting the Earth, climbing
Mount Everest, exploring the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, and visiting the
Antarctic. A film about the
Mars Exploration Rovers, titled
Roving Mars (2006), used exclusive data from the rovers.
DreamWorks in the early 2000s wanted to re-release
Shrek in IMAX 3D, but this too was canceled as a result of creative changes in the studio. These failed attempts at re-releases did inspire IMAX to experiment and improve their ability in presenting computer animation in their theaters. Their compilation
CyberWorld was the result, which contained new original animation and IMAX-presented versions of computer-animated tests and music videos.
Cyberworld even presented
open-matte 3D versions of the bar sequence from
Antz and the "
Homer3" segment from
The Simpsons; both coincidentally were animated at
Pacific Data Images.
Walt Disney Pictures became the first studio to release theatrical films in the IMAX process. Released on New Year's Day in 2000,
Fantasia 2000 was the studio's first IMAX release and the first theatrical feature presented in IMAX theaters. It was originally planned as a standard theatrical release, but in agreeing with the company to release the film, the IMAX sound system incorporated a multi-channel and multi-layer stereo system for the orchestrated soundtrack, similar to the
Fantasound system Walt Disney had envisioned for the
original film in 1940. The company agreed to Disney's terms and conditions to gain the exclusive first showings of the film. These included a limited engagement of four months (from January 1 to April 30) and 50% of the box office receipts. Not all IMAX theatres were prepared to accept Disney's terms to present the film; however, following the IMAX release, a standard 35 mm run followed in June at regular theaters. Although
Fantasia 2000 had a lukewarm financial run, the critical praise for its use of the IMAX format convinced Disney to put more releases in the giant-screen format in the pipeline. In 2002, IMAX re-releases of
Beauty and the Beast and
The Lion King were released in select theaters over the winter and Christmas seasons of that year. New
digital masters were created from the original
Computer Animation Production System (CAPS) production files, and select scenes of animation were cleaned up to make use of the high-resolution IMAX film negatives.
Treasure Planet was also released in select IMAX theaters and was the first theatrical film released in regular and IMAX theaters simultaneously. But all of these releases had underwhelming box office returns and Disney canceled later big-screen re-releases, including
Aladdin. With the unveiling of the DMR process (see below),
Warner Bros. Pictures especially embraced the format beginning in 2003 with the two
Matrix sequels,
Reloaded and
Revolutions. Since
The Prisoner of Azkaban in 2004, Warner Bros. began releasing
the Harry Potter film franchise in IMAX to strong financial success. Also in 2004, the studio released
Robert Zemeckis'
motion-capture film
The Polar Express in IMAX 3D.
Polar Express became the most successful film released in IMAX theaters, producing at least a quarter of the film's gross of $302 million from fewer than 100 IMAX screens. Success for Warner Bros. and IMAX followed in later years with
I Am Legend,
Happy Feet,
Batman Begins and
The Dark Knight. Progressively other studios became further interested in releasing films in IMAX through the DMR process and have earned success through it. In May 2009,
J. J. Abrams's
Star Trek was released in IMAX venues for the initial two weeks of its theatrical run and opened to $8.3 million. The IMAX opening weekends of
The Avengers and
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 have since grossed $15 million. Though they were not filmed with IMAX cameras,
Skyfall and
The Amazing Spider-Man were optimized for IMAX Digital screens when they were released. Both movies were filmed in high-resolution cameras and the digital negative ratio was equal to that of the IMAX Digital frame.
Skyfall increased the visual information of the entire film while
Amazing Spider-Man optimized the finale battle with the Lizard. When
James Cameron's
Titanic was restored and re-released in theaters there was also specially made open-matte version for IMAX. In 2010, after years of successful IMAX DMR releases, Warner Bros. signed a deal to release up to 20 feature films in IMAX up to 2013, including educational documentaries that were in production. In May 2015,
Marvel Studios announced that its next two
Avengers films –
Avengers: Infinity War (2018) and
Avengers: Endgame (2019) – would be filmed entirely in IMAX, the first Hollywood feature films to do so, using a modified version of
Arri's Alexa 65 digital camera. The camera was used first to film select sequences in another Marvel production, 2016's
Captain America: Civil War.
DMR (Digital Media Remastering) IMAX's proprietary DMR (Digital Media Remastering) process
up-converts conventional films to IMAX format. This special
digital intermediate technology lets IMAX venues show films shot on 35mm for conventional theaters. In 2002,
Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones and an IMAX-format re-release of the 1995 film
Apollo 13, were the first official applications of the DMR process. Because of projection limitations at the time, the studios had to edit
Apollo 13 and
Attack of the Clones to have a shorter playing time. As IMAX updated the system and expanded the size of the platters, the later DMR releases did not have this limitation; current platters provide a run time of up to 180 minutes. Reviewers have generally praised the results of the DMR blowup process, which are visually and audibly superior to the same films projected in 35mm. But some filmmakers, such as producer
Frank Marshall, point out that DMR blowups are not comparable to films created directly in the 70 mm 15 perf IMAX format, and that directors
Ron Howard and
George Lucas expected better. They note that the decline of
Cinerama coincided roughly with its replacement by a simpler, cheaper, technically inferior version, and view DMR with alarm. IMAX originally reserved the phrase "the IMAX experience" for true 70 mm productions, but now allows its use on DMR productions as well. After
The Lion King in 2003, no Hollywood studio engaged in re-releasing and restoring classic films through the IMAX DMR process until 2012 although ongoing conversion of new releases continued and continued to grow in number. James Cameron's
Titanic underwent both 3D conversion and DMR conversion to 3D in 2012 as did
Men in Black 3. In August 2012, IMAX and
Paramount Pictures announced a one-week exclusive re-release of
Raiders of the Lost Ark on September 7, 2012, to promote the release of the Blu-ray collection. The film, before it underwent DMR, was already restored in a 4K digital intermediate with 7.1 surround sound from the original negative. The process for IMAX theaters, like with the complete restoration, was supervised by
Steven Spielberg and sound designer
Ben Burtt. "I didn't know if the 1981 print would stand up to a full IMAX transfer, so I came expecting a sort of grainy, muddy, and overly enlarged representation of the movie I had made years ago", Spielberg said. "I was blown away by the fact that it looked better than the movie I had made years ago."
Feature films has been a vocal supporter of the IMAX 70mm film format, and has collaborated with the company since the mid-2000s. Many recent features have employed IMAX cameras for select scenes; however, before 2018, no full-length feature film was shot entirely using IMAX cameras due to the numerous difficulties presented with the format – the cameras were much larger and heavier than standard cameras and the noise they produced made dialogue recording difficult. The 15/70 cameras have short film loads ranging from 30 seconds to two minutes However, these issues have been minimized thanks to the digital Arri Alexa IMAX camera, with two films having been shot entirely with the camera.
The Dark Knight features six sequences (a total of 28 minutes) shot using IMAX. According to the film's press notes, this was the "first time ever that a major feature film has been even partially shot using IMAX cameras". Even before
Dark Knight, Nolan had wanted to shoot a film in the IMAX format, and he also used it for quiet scenes that it would make pictorially interesting. Nolan said that he wished that it were possible to shoot the entire film in IMAX: "if you could take an IMAX camera to Mount Everest or outer space, you could use it in a feature movie." Nolan chose to edit some of the IMAX sequences using the original camera negative to eliminate generation loss, while scenes that were digitally mastered were scanned and printed out at 8 thousand lines of horizontal resolution (8K). When the film opened in 94 IMAX venues in 2008, all of them were sold out for the opening weekend. A year later, director
Michael Bay was inspired by IMAX's use in
The Dark Knight to feature big-screen sequences in
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. The film's co-writer Roberto Orci suggested that the IMAX footage would be 3D, but Bay later said that considering himself an "old school" filmmaker, he found 3D gimmicky and added that shooting in IMAX was easier than using stereoscopic cameras. The IMAX version of the film, in the end, contained almost ten minutes of IMAX-filmed footage out of the two-and-a-half-hour film. Bay later partially filmed the third
Transformers film,
Dark of the Moon in 3D but without IMAX. Bay returned to IMAX for the fourth film,
Age of Extinction, in 2014. It was the first feature film shot using digital IMAX 3D cameras. He again used IMAX 3D cameras while shooting the fifth film,
Transformers: The Last Knight, filming 98% of the film with 2 Alexa/IMAX cameras attached together to a special mount. Two years later,
Terrence Malick's
The Tree of Life filmed select sequences using IMAX cameras, and often used natural light. The film used a mix of 35mm film and standard 65mm and the IMAX 15/70 mm format. The set of guidelines they fine-tuned for this film included an edict to achieve maximum resolution whenever possible. "We would have preferred to shoot the entire movie in IMAX," says the cinematographer of the film
Emmanuel Lubezki. "When the 65mm and IMAX scenes do appear in the movie, they give you a jolt. It's a feeling of enhancement and majesty. It's almost as if someone cleaned off the window you were looking through". However the film was not screened on any IMAX screen. After
The Tree of Life,
Brad Bird's
Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol included 25 minutes of footage shot using IMAX cameras. Bird believed that using IMAX format would bring back "a level of showmanship" to the presentation of Hollywood films, which he believes the industry has lost due to its emphasis on screening films in
multiplexes as opposed to grand theaters, and vetoing "first runs" in favor of wider initial releases. He also added that the IMAX format offered the viewer more immersion than digital 3D due to its brighter, higher quality image, which is projected on a larger screen, without the need for specialized 3D glasses.
Ghost Protocol opened on December 16, 2011, in almost 500 IMAX venues worldwide a week before its wide release where it earned third place in the box office and $12 million. As with
The Dark Knight,
Christopher Nolan decided to film sequences of the sequel,
The Dark Knight Rises, in 15/70 IMAX. Nolan elected not to film in 3D and stated that he intends to focus on improving image quality and scale using the IMAX format. In a then-Hollywood record,
The Dark Knight Rises featured 72 minutes of footage shot in 70mm IMAX (roughly 2.5 times that of ''The Dark Knight's
28 minutes, however, this record was later overtaken by another Nolan film, Dunkirk'', which featured 79 minutes of IMAX). Because of the considerable noise IMAX cameras make, they used standard 35mm cameras to shoot dialogue scenes, and dubbed dialogue in scenes shot with IMAX cameras. Chairman and president of the IMAX Corporation, Greg Foster, stated that IMAX plans to run the film in its theaters for two months, despite only being contractually committed to run the film for two weeks in some theaters.
J. J. Abrams's
Star Trek Into Darkness,
Francis Lawrence's
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire,
Luc Besson's
Lucy, and Christopher Nolan's
Interstellar are films that were released between 2013 and 2014 that had sequences filmed with 15/70 IMAX cameras. On July 9, 2014, Bad Robot (J. J. Abrams's production company) confirmed via a picture uploaded to Twitter that one sequence in Disney and Lucasfilm's
Star Wars: The Force Awakens would be captured with the IMAX 15/70 perf film cameras, in addition to the standard 35 mm film cameras that Abrams and his cinematographer Dan Mindel have employed for shooting the movie. The next installment in the franchise
Rian Johnson's
Star Wars: The Last Jedi, released in December 2017, also included sequences shot with 15/70 IMAX cameras.
Adele's music video "
Hello", released in 2015, became the first music video that was partially filmed with IMAX cameras. In April 2015, Marvel Studios announced that
Russo brothers'
Captain America: Civil War would be the first film to use the new Arri Alexa IMAX 2D digital camera, which was used to shoot approximately 15 minutes of the film. Other films between 2016 and 2021 that captured with IMAX cameras were
Zack Snyder's
Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,
Clint Eastwood's
Sully,
Damien Chazelle's
First Man,
Jon Favreau's
The Lion King, Patty Jenkins'
Wonder Woman 1984 and
Cary Joji Fukunaga's
No Time to Die.
Sully was filmed with Arri Alexa IMAX cameras for almost the entire film and
The Lion King for select sequences. The rest had sequences that were filmed with 15/70 mm IMAX cameras. Five Chinese titles have been captured with IMAX digital cameras (including two with IMAX-certified cameras); selected scenes in
Jiang Wen's
Gone with the Bullets in 2014, the entirety of
Guan Hu's
The Eight Hundred in 2020, almost all of
Chen Sicheng's
Detective Chinatown 3 in 2021 and the entirety of
Chen Kaige,
Tsui Hark and
Dante Lam's
The Battle at Lake Changjin and
The Battle at Lake Changjin II with IMAX-certified
Red Ranger Monstro cameras in 2020 and 2022. Christopher Nolan used 15/70 IMAX cameras again on his next film,
Dunkirk. However, unlike the previous films, where he used the cameras for select sequences, Nolan used IMAX as the primary shooting format, with 75% (about 79 minutes) of the 106-minute film featuring footage shot in 70 mm IMAX (breaking the aforementioned record that a previous Nolan film,
The Dark Knight Rises, held). This was possible due to the sparsity of dialogue in the film, as 15/70 mm IMAX cameras are notoriously noisy (a few dialogue-heavy scenes were shot with regular 70 mm film cameras from
Panavision). IMAX cameras were also used hand-held for the first time, as Nolan was advised by both
Steven Spielberg and
Ron Howard that it was the best way to shoot on vessels.
Dunkirk received the widest release on 70mm IMAX since his last film,
Interstellar, with the film being released on the format in 37 theaters around the world. The director's 2020 film,
Tenet filmed 76 minutes with 15/70 mm IMAX cameras, the rest of the film was shot with regular 70 mm film cameras from
Panavision. The film's six-minute opening sequence was shown before IMAX screenings of
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. Tenet was shown over 13 theaters globally in 70mm IMAX. In September 2020, IMAX announced a new program called 'Filmed for IMAX', a brand new collaboration with camera manufacturers to meet filmmaker demand for the format. Through the program, IMAX will certify digital cameras with brands including
Arri Alexa,
Panavision,
Red Digital Cinema, and
Sony to work in the IMAX format when paired with its
post-production process. The new program certifies the
Arri Alexa LF and
Mini LF,
Panavision Millennium DXL2,
Red Ranger Monstro and Komodo and
Sony's CineAlta Venice cameras along with the Arri Alexa IMAX camera previously announced with Arri Rental. As part of the program, IMAX will also certify independent camera rental houses that can supply certified cameras worldwide, starting with Panavision, Arri and Keslow Camera. IMAX will select only a limited number of films to participate in the program each year.
James Gunn's
The Suicide Squad (shot with the Red Ranger Monstro and Komodo),
Colin Tilley's ''
If I Can't Have Love, I Want Power'' (shot with the Arri Alexa IMAX),
Destin Daniel Cretton's
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings,
Denis Villeneuve's
Dune,
Chloé Zhao's
Eternals (all three titles shot with the Arri Alexa LF and Mini LF) and
Joseph Kosinski's
Top Gun: Maverick (shot with the Sony CineAlta Venice) are among the first releases certified as 'Filmed for IMAX' through the new program. Other films between 2022 and 2024 that are captured with IMAX-certified cameras are
Sam Raimi's
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (Shot with the Panavision Millennium DXL2),
Taika Waititi's
Thor: Love and Thunder (shot with Arri Alexa LF and Mini LF),
Ryan Coogler's
Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (shot with the Sony CineAlta Venice),
Peyton Reed's
Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (Shot with the Arri Alexa LF and Mini LF),
Michael B. Jordan's
Creed III (shot with the Sony CineAlta Venice),
James Wan's
Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom (Shot with the Panavision Millennium DXL2),
James Gunn's
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (Shot with the Red V-Raptor),
Christopher McQuarrie's
Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (Shot with Arri Alexa LF, Mini LF and Sony CineAlta Venice),
Nia DaCosta's
The Marvels (Shot with the Arri Alexa LF and Mini LF),
Ángel Manuel Soto's
Blue Beetle, Denis Villeneuve's
Dune: Part Two (shot with Arri Alexa LF and Mini LF). In March 2022, IMAX plans to develop new 15/70 cameras that would be created with input from filmmakers such as
Jordan Peele and Christopher Nolan. The work will be done in collaboration with
Kodak, camera maker
Panavision, and post-production company and film lab
FotoKem. The large format company is also consulting with leading cinematographers including
Linus Sandgren (
No Time to Die),
Rachel Morrison (
Black Panther),
Bradford Young (
Arrival),
Dan Mindel (
Star Trek) and Nolan's go-to DP,
Hoyte van Hoytema. Peele's 2022 film
Nope was filmed with the current generation of 15/70 IMAX cameras and Kodak 65mm film. IMAX intends to add at least four new 15/70 cameras to its offing over the next two years, with the first new camera expected to be put into use by late 2023. In April 2022, it was announced that the 2022
Pixar animated film
Lightyear to have created a virtual IMAX camera in its production and the first 'animated' film to captured it. "We created a virtual IMAX camera with 1.43:1 aspect ratio and developed a pipeline to allow us to simultaneously shoot the film for IMAX, and then crop down for our standard 2.39:1 format," Jane Yen, Lightyear visual effects supervisor, revealed during a press conference. One of the two director's of photography Jeremy Lasky later said "I think this is the first that has been made for IMAX in this way. There's about a third of the film that was shot for IMAX. And the easy answer is that we have a set of lenses. And when I say lenses, I mean CGI made". A set of lenses that recreate the look of an anamorphic lens, which is your typical wide screen. You'll notice things out of focus in the background instead of being round are like stretched a little bit. There's like that blue lens flare that you see. It's anamorphic lenses where the way to shoot wide screen in the sixties, seventies, and then later got phased out a little bit, but they're still used today. But those visual effects call to a period of sci-fi that we were looking at, which is why those same lenses or versions of those lenses were used on
WALL-E". Later he recommend "So for the 30 or so minutes of the movie in IMAX, we shot with those lenses opened up to the 1.43 aspect ratio and composed for that while keeping the composition as clear and as solid for a 2.39:1 crop from the center. So the wide-screen image is pulled out of the IMAX image. Which all sounds really technical, but all it really means is, when you're watching it an IMAX screen, we were thinking about those scenes as IMAX. And it wasn't just some after the film was done, blow up of the movie". In December 2022, it was announced that IMAX have certified the Red V-Raptor as a new certified camera and that
James Gunn's
Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 will be the first film to shoot with the cameras instead of the Red Ranger Monstro. 30 minutes of 137 minutes of the 2025 film
Sinners, directed by
Ryan Coogler, was shot with IMAX MSM 9802 camera using 65 mm film stock.
In space exploration holds a 70-pound IMAX camera in the mid-deck of the space shuttle
Challenger in 1984. IMAX cameras have flown in space on 17 occasions,
NASA astronauts have used handheld IMAX cameras to document missions, and an IMAX camera has also been mounted in the payload bay of the Shuttle. Space shuttle mission
STS-41-C filmed the deployment of the
LDEF (Long duration exposure facility) and the repair of the
Solar Max satellite. This footage was included in the 1985 IMAX movie
The Dream Is Alive. Kennedy Space Center in Florida has two IMAX 3D theaters. These show space movies, including footage shot on missions and narrated by celebrities. Two of the IMAX cameras used by NASA are now on display at the
National Air and Space Museum in
Washington, D.C.. == Awards ==