SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- From the world's largest TV on a wall to the smallest screens in the palm of your hand, how will you watch the films in the coming years? The answer is not on film. Here's a look at the final curtain for celluloid movies and the Drive to Discover their replacement.
It's the end of the road for physical film. Distributors have declared 2013 the expiration date for the celluloid we've enjoyed for a century.
"The sun is setting on celluloid quickly," said Stuart Bowling, the Worldwide Technical Marketing Manager from Dolby Laboratories.
Holdouts -- largely independent and art houses -- have a narrow window to invest in a digital projector, even a digital box office.
"The box office is a touch panel. The audience walks in, goes up to the TV, taps on it, swipes their credit card, picks the ticket up and then goes into the movie theatre that now no longer has a projection booth," said Bowling.
You heard right, the projector hangs from the ceiling. All of these changes can be seen at the new escape cinemas from India. His Dolby Laboratory stands at the crossroads of all this change. Recently the San Francisco company took theatre sound from 5.1 to 7.1 Dolby surround.
"With new formats like 7.1 we can now bring sound off the screen to the sides of the audience for the first time. A cinema in the near future, and we've done a lot of experimentation on this, will have the ability to put sound over the audience," said Bowling.
And in front of the home audience the display maker Sharp promises the world's largest, highest resolution LCD, 16 times the pixels in your HDTV.
Even with all the tremendous change, a technologist is allowed to get sentimental.
"The colors that we get from there and just the look of shining a light through that medium and then projecting it onto a screen, we all have those dreams and fantasies where we're just looking for that moment of entertainment, make me laugh, maybe make me cry and just hat sheer amount of joy you can get from that 90 minute to two hour experience," said Bowling.
movies, drive to discover
- Police ID body found near Vacaville as Sandra Coke
- Officials to announce Bay Bridge opening date
- Bay Area group marching for immigration reform
- Woman's body found in East Palo Alto apartment
- Sunnyvale woman found slain in home identified
- Oakland Unified board to consider selling properties
- Local woman claims app didn't help get iPhone back
- J.C. Penney under fire for back-to-school television ad
- California paternity-rights bill on hold
- Antioch boy mauled by pit bull may undergo surgery
- Couple seeking owners of lost puppy found in SF Bay
- abcnews: Mystery priest at Missouri car accident...
- weather: Bay Area weather forecast for Wednesday
- roundup: SF drug bust; Body found on I-880 ramp
-
Most Popular
-
Most Viewed StoriesMost Viewed VideoMost Viewed Photos
- abc7news.com home
- Site Map
- RSS
- Advertise with Us
- Contact Us
- Online Public Inspection File
- Technical Help
- ABC.com
- ABCNews.com
- Privacy Policy
- Interest-Based Ads
- Safety Information for this site
- Terms of Use
- Copyright ©2013 ABC Inc., KGO-TV San Francisco, CA. All Rights Reserved.




