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Introduction to Cinema 180 |
Read more at in70mm.com The 70mm Newsletter
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Written by: Thomas Hauerslev, based on newspaper clippings,
information and brochures from Omni Films, 1990 |
Date:
05.03.2021 |
One
of four Danish Cinema 180 installations. Installed in
early 1980s at Dyrehavsbakken, north of Copenhagen (DK). Picture by Thomas Hauerslev
If you browse through the history of the various large image "Scopes", "Ramas" and
"Visions" cinematic processes, certainly "Cinema 180"
would seem to be the obvious candidate
for being the most fun
of them all. Cinema 180 was a direct extension of
Cinerama (1952) and
Todd-AO (1955), both large format
projection systems, both of which pioneered audience participation, and gave the
spectators an authentic "you are there" illusion.
Go to in70mm.com's Todd-AO Page
Go to in70mm.com's Cinerama page
Pronounced "Cinema One-Eighty", the process was the most honest "First
Person" thrill-ride you could imagine on
70mm film. Roller coasters, fire trucks, speed boats, motorcycles and airplanes:
mount a
65mm camera very low and in the front, and then go as fast as you can. Fly through deep
narrow canyons, speed through narrow streets, ride trains on high mountain
rails, or
drive on an expressway at high speed. Photograph it with short focal lenses, to exaggerate the speed
and perspective, and the illusion of reality will put the audience "in the
picture".
Cinema 180 ride films were shown in 70mm on the inside of a huge 180 degree screen
domed structure. There was typically no seating in most cinemas, the audience
would be standing in front of the
screen. The screen went from side to side, and all the way up from the floor to the
top of the dome. Cinema 180 cinemas were typically installed at:
Amusement parks, Theme and Recreation Parks
World's Fairs and Expositions
Trade Shows, Museums, Planetariums, Shopping Malls
With a running time of only about 10-13 minutes for each
film, it was enough
to give the audience an impressive immersive "right in the gut" experience, which often
challenged their balance and orientation. Here in Copenhagen (and elsewhere) it was not uncommon
to see people fall during performances. They might have enjoyed a bit too much to
drink in Copenhagen's Tivoli Gardens or at Dyrehavsbakken, and could easily
become overwhelmed by the large image and loose their balance.
They simply became dizzy from the spectacular action on the domed screen. It was a very popular and entertaining cinema experience
throughout the late '70s and through the '80s.
The characteristic and colourful "tent" attractions were installed all over the world.
Cinema 180 was installed in the North- and South America, the Far East, the
Middle East, Europe and
Australia / New Zealand. At the peak, some 175 theatres operated around the world.
They were
cost effective, easy to maintain and mobile so they could go where the
crowds were. This is how the company presented itself:
"OMNI Films International, Inc.
designs, sells and installs 70MM wide-screen cinema and motion
simulation theater systems to independent exhibitors. The systems are
used in amusement and theme parks and other specialized markets. In
addition, Omni Films International Inc produces and licenses films for
use in their systems to companies worldwide on a continual basis."
Go to Cinema 180 in
Denmark
Go to Films in Cinema 180
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More in 70mm reading:
Cinema 180 Films
including
OmniVision Specialty Films, MagnaVision, OmniVision, MotionMaster and
ESI 3D
PDF: iWERKS /
Cinema 180 theatre list (1996)
Cinema 180 in Denmark
iWERKS
Showscan
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70mm
frame - note the curvature of the image in the frame ("Pincushion" or
"Barrel distortion", to photographers). The result of photography with a very
short focal length lens.
The
70mm projector was projecting upwards at an angle of about 30 degrees. I have seen
projectors of many brands being used for Cinema 180: Ballantyne, Prevost,
Victoria 8 and a Philips DP75. The projection lens was typically an ISCO
Ultra MC Special 21mm with a huge front element about the size of a dinner
plate. The projection "port hole" between the dome cinema and the projection room
was a huge panorama window sitting as close as possible to the machine.
With the 21mm ISCO lens, the projected image, filled the entire window.
Cinema 180 is still remembered as a fun ride / attraction by many who saw
it. Helen Dolling wrote on Facebook in 2010:
"Cinema 180 was the best fun ever! I
remember laughing like a child while being unable to stand up. The
rollercoaster film was so much better than the real things. I was there
with a bunch of 13 year old students who didn't understand why I was so
insistent that they had to come and experience the inside of a dome, but
then they loved it too."
Fred Hollingsworth III
(Jan 15, 1930 - Mar 18, 2018) was the president and founder of Omnivision, Inc. (in Florida,
USA), and is considered
to be the father of film-based attractions. He was an internationally-known creator
and manufacturer of Cinema 180, Motion Master, Omnivision, Magnavision and
ESI-3D. He pioneered
the design and manufacture of entertainment attractions for nearly four
decades. He was the pioneer in recognizing the revolutionary entertainment
potential of 70mm film.
He literally invented amusement park theatres
and designed the Cinema 180 attraction in 1974. It was called Cinema
180 because it was 70mm film
projected onto a 180 degree dome screen.
Cinema 180 was the first kind of theatre to exist almost specifically for amusement parks. He put the
audience in the middle of the imagery and surrounded them in the
film experience.
In 1987 Fred introduced Motion Master theatre seats that moved in sync with
the action on the screen.
Cinema 180 and Motion Master were ground-breaking techniques, and a big hit
with the audience.
Fred Hollingsworth III also pioneered the use of the 8/70mm format for his
Dimension360 and MagnaVision 70mm theatres. He even had a 70mm 3D system
developed which he called ESI-3S.
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The last known operational cinema of this
kind was apparently the Cinema 180 at Rainbow's End in Auckland Theme Park (New
Zealand), which closed in 2015. It had originally opened in 1983. Picture by Cameron Glendinning.
The library of film consisted of 15 different titles each with a 13 minute
running time. Narration could be produced in every language requested or only with music and effects. All films
were with 6 channels magnetic
soundtrack in format 5/70mm (5-perf pull
down) in either 24 or 30 frames per sec. This also applied for the 8-perf system with
24 or 30 fps. that was used for Magnavision, Omnivision and Motion Master
systems.
Cinema 180 titles were flashy and catching like "Crazy Wheels", "Flight
747", "Wild Wild West", "International Thrill Show", "Demon Shock", "Galaxy
of Thrills", "Fantastic Flights" and "Pacific Pursuit". Basically
the same type of scenes in all productions except they were photographed in
different places. "Galaxy of Thrills" was built up by 11 scenes in
lengths from 20 seconds to 90 seconds. See the full breakdown of scenes below.
All Cinema 180
titles were produced by Omni Films Int., Inc. with
camera-equipment from other suppliers. Two original
M.C.S.-70 65mm
cameras of West German origin were purchased by Omnivision Inc. and used to
photograph Cinema 180.
Go to Cinema 180,
OmniVision Specialty Films, MagnaVision, OmniVision, MotionMaster and ESI 3D
Go to The M.C.S.-70
Process and European Cinema of the 1960s
Here is a breakdown of scenes from the
Cinema 180 production "Galaxy of Thrills", as it was presented in
Tivoli Gardens, Copenhagen in the 1980s.
OmniVision presents
In Cinema 180.
Produced by Fred Hollingsworth III and Richard Marchant.
Shelton Productions.
11 sequences, running time 11 minutes, 377 meters / 1238 ft.
German narration, no DK subtitles
01:30 Roller Coaster
00:58 Race cars
00:22 Skate board
00:59 Fire truck in suburb
01:28 Roller coaster II
00:44 Race cars track
00:26 Hawaii surf
01:20 Hawaii airplane
00:47 Swing
00:40 London
01:46 Monte Carlo
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Two
original MCS-70 65mm cameras of West German origin were purchased by
Omnivision Inc. and used to photograph Cinema 180. Picture by Scott Shepley
This is how Omni Films presented the synopsis:
Take an excursion to the threshold of
fear on the "Thunder Bolt" roller coaster. Whirl through the "Mind
Bender" roller coaster with an 80 foot dive, triple loop and two
vertical somersaults. Finesse your way through flying Dutch rolls
and "shoot the bowl" with a world champion skateboarder. Your stunt
car explodes off a tunnel ramp. A high pitched siren pierces your
senses. Suddenly a long red hook and ladder rushing to a fire
streaks past. You're hanging on for dear life as you swing around
sharp corners. Anxiety mounts as a woman, pushing a baby carriage,
steps into the path of the oncoming fire truck. "Hang Ten" on a high
crest off Waikiki Beach. Marvel at steep, volcanic canyons covered
with lush green tropical foliage in Kauai, Hawaii. Swing to and fro
on an ornate Viking vessel. Big Ben rises commanding-ly as you
clutch the handle of a London taxi during rush hour. A skilled
driver shifts his purring Porsche into the fast lane. Overtaking all
competition, he whirls through narrow hairpin turns to a screeching
halt.
Omnivision also licensed the use of 65mm footage to other productions. "Brainstorm"
(MGM 1983) produced and directed by
Douglas Trumbull, features
eleven point of view scenes from Omni Films movie library including the
"Loch Ness Monster", roller coaster, Lake Placid bobsled run, snowmobiling
in Utah, Grand Canyon, Golden Gate Bridge, surfboarding, and a runaway
tractor trailer.
Some "Brainstorm"
scenes is photographed with an OmniVision fish-eye lens (designed by Milt
Laikin), almost similar to the Cinerama Fairchild-Curtis 160-degree 2
ultra wide-angle lens, which was also used for many wide angle shots on
Stanley Kubrick's "2OO1: A
Space Odyssey" (MGM 1968).
The beauty of vintage Cinema 180 titles is the fact that everything is real,
and photographed on 65mm FILM, unlike present days thrill-rides, which are
often 100% computer generated images. The difference is staggering. It is nice to see
the world as it looked at the time when the films were produced.
From the Omnivision brochure:
No other film format
offers the opportunity to deliver such massive amounts of visual information
with so much sharpness, color saturation and brightness.
Omnivision, Inc. and its subsidiary Omni Films International, Inc. were
operational from 1976 until 1994, and operated as a full service 70mm film
company, with complete production facilities.
Omni Films was recognized worldwide for its award-winning technological
achievements. Omni Films' five and eight perforation 70mm formats expanded the
traditional film image to totally encompass and involve audiences, creating
the sensation that they are actually part of the action. An Omni Films
"You Are There" theater experience enthralled audiences, guaranteeing
positive recommendations and repeat visits.
During the '80 and early '90s competition became intense between large format
players and
ride-film attractions. The main competitors were iWERKS, Showscan, IMAX and
SimEx, and in May 1993, Variety announced that
Showscan and Omni Films had signed a merger agreement "in hopes that the synergies of their technologies will
boost profitability". However, in 1994,
iWERKS Entertainment,
Inc., of Burbank, California
purchased Omni Films, in a $17-million deal.
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Fred Hollingsworth III,
President and Founder of Omni Films International, Inc. Picture from
Omni Film's presentation folder
In Germany Cinema 180 films were also produced under the name Cinevision
/ Cinema 2000 by Udo Kaup (1942). In an e-mail to the editor in February
2021, his son Marcel Kaup writes:
"Most films were shot in 35mm and
"blown up" to 70mm. The last film production in 1994 in Florida
(Magic Florida) was shot with an original Panavision 65mm camera.
The market for Cinema 180 dome cinemas had already died off in the
1980s. Then there was another slight upswing due to the opening of the
GDR (Former East Germany, Ed). My father operated three dome cinemas
from 1990 to 1997 in East Germany and Poland. One of the last stationary
Cinema 180s we supplied with 70mm films and wide-angle lenses was Luna
Park in Tel Aviv. But this cinema also closed down in 2012."
The last known operational cinema of this
kind was apparently the Cinema 180 at Rainbow's End in Auckland Theme Park (New
Zealand), which closed in 2015. It had opened in 1983, and after 32 years of
operation, the entire installation, including the Philips DP75 projector, was
sold to enthusiasts on eBay.
Fred Hollingsworth III passed away three years later at the age of 88,
on Sunday, March 18, 2018 at Doctors Hospital in Sarasota, Florida.
From legacy.com (edited):
Fred III was born to Frances Keppler and Fred Hollingsworth, Jr. in Grand
Rapids, Michigan, January 15, 1930. The beginning of Fred's fascinating and
rewarding life began at age 7 when his father took him to the 1937 National
Association of Amusement Parks, Pools & Beaches (NAAPPB) convention, where
his love of the amusement industry began. In 1972 NAAPPB became the
International Association of Amusement Parks & Attractions (IAAPA). Fred
grew up in the carnival business and was first known as a successful ride
operator and manufacturer through a series of his companies, which included
Holly Bros., Fun Rides and ADCO which manufactured Fun Houses, Glass Houses,
Flying Bobs and Dark Rides (Olivia Newton-John & John Travolta rode in one
of Fred's dark rides in the movie "Grease").
Fred III was inducted into the IAAPA Hall of Fame
(International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions) in November 2015. Fred's motto was
"Build to last, attract and entertain."
The legacy of Fred Hollingsworth III still
lives in the memory of the audiences who saw the films. Old faded 70mm
prints still surfaces on eBay from time to time when they change hands
between collectors here and there. Sometimes vintage Cinema 180 films are shown at 70mm
festivals in Karlsruhe (Germany)
and Krnov (Czech Republic)
as a welcome surprise. Only this time - the audience is sitting down in
comfortable chairs, and will not fall over.
Go to PDF:
iWERKS / Cinema 180 theatre list (1996)
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Cinema 180 Product information
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Picture
from Omni Film's presentation folder
The Cinema 180 Theater Dome structure consists of a heavy-duty, flame
resistant, vinyl-coated polyester roof and sidewall membrane tensioned over
a galvanized steel frame. A quadrispherically shaped negative-pressure
membrane projection screen attaches and seals to the frame and concrete
floor. A blower located between the rear of the projection screen and the
roof and sidewall membrane creates a negative pressure on the back side of
the screen, causing it to take its proper quadrispheric shape. Cinema 180
Theater Systems, available in four standard sizes, are specifically designed
to exhibit Cinema 180.
Cinema 180 Theatre Systems were available in four standard sizes.
Model 55A
275 / 100 standing/seated
Screen 12,80 m. 7,93 meter height. 5,49 meter depth
Model 72A
425 / 160 standing/seated
Screen 15,24 m. 7,93 meter height. 6,4 meter depth
Model 55XL
500 / 150 standing/seated
Model 72XL
625 / 250 standing/seated
People per hour with three 12 minute shows pr hour
Standing/Seated
825 / 200
1275 / 480
1500 / 450
1875 / 750
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Omni Films International camera crews challenge the impossible. They strap
themselves onto helicopters, challenge rapids, race cars, go up, down, in
and out of impossible places for a whole new point of view. Jeff Simon,
who's credit include "Magic Florida. Picture from
Omni Film's presentation folder
Operating personnel
One projectionist
One Usher on high traffic days
Equipment Supplied:
Cinema 180 Projection Systems
Cinema 180 Lens
Theater
Structures with Screens for new installations
Frame Supported Screens for existing structures
Mobile Trailer Mounted Theaters
Omnisound System - 6 Channels
Options:
Continuous Loop Film Cabinet Film Platter
Mobile Air Conditioner
Ticket Box Portable Foundation
Decorative Facade
Power Roof Ventilator
Custom Exterior Color for Theater Structure
The Power of Presentation
We write, produce and package the spectacular to hold your audience by their
eyes and ears and make them yours. Surround and stimulate their senses with
excitement and emotion. Take them for an unbelievable ride from the ocean
floor to mountaintops. Tell your corporate story, put your product on a
pedestal, or sway audiences to your point of view.
A Complete Service
We provide the production, the technology, the cinematic hardware, the
theater. Omni Films International cinematic experience and unique 70mm film
technology is available nowhere else. Position your program where you need
it. We do the rest. Then, take it on the road, exhibit at a convention
center, convert an existing structure or choose from a broad range of
permanent theater buildings custom designed for minimal maintenance and
maximum traffic flow.
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Left
to right: Fitz-Edward Otis (Vice President of Marketing and Sales), Julian
Angus (Vice President of Engineering) and Fred Hollingsworth III (President
and Founder). Picture from Omni Film's presentation folder
A Bold New Approach to Cinematography
Omni Films International camera crews challenge the impossible. They strap
themselves onto helicopters, challenge rapids, race cars, go up, down, in
and out of impossible places for a whole new point of view. Combined with
one-of-a-kind camera equipment, the unique becomes unforgettable and the
unforgettable, spectacular. Your audience is thrilled, startled, stunned and
ready for more. Our ability to draw an audience, to hold them riveted, to
sell them again and again is a proven commodity, whether you choose from our
library of high adventures, or commission us to create a 70mm production
that's exclusively yours.
Types of cinemas: Cinema 180 (Resembling the Gunnery Trainer of the '40s),
MotionMaster, 3D, OmniVision. All over the world we have over 100 theaters showing
Cinema 180 still in operation. In Denmark we had in the past four units in
operation.
Four cinemas in Denmark plus one MotionMaster.
Cinema 180ฎ: Surround your audience with captivating color, action
and sound. Memorable minutes of "being there" transport you from one
dramatic and electrifying experience to another. Exhibit this enormously
successful 70mm film in a
theater configuration designed to meet your space, mobility and budget
requirements.
Dimension36Oฎ: A startling visual effect featuring 360 degrees of action on a dome screen
that opens the world from horizon to horizon. Our 70mm, single projector
system is the technical marvel that makes it happen.
MagnaVision: Magnavision's giant 6-story screen transforms a stadium, arena or convention
center into an astonishing media event. Your production will have resolution
and color intensity never before achieved on screens of this magnitude. Turn
your imagination loose.
ESI-3D:
Enhanced Spatial Imaging. A 70mm, 3-D effect that explodes off the screen
into the audience. This single-camera/projector 3-D technology reaches
beyond anything ever seen before. A guaranteed crowd pleaser that brings
them back again and again.
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Complete Documentation
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70mm
frame
All OmniVision 70mm film- and theater-systems. PDF Material Supplied by Omni Films,
1990:
PDF 1986:
Cinema 180
Dimension 360
ESI 3D
MagnaVision
PDF 1990:
Cinema 180
Cinema 180 Technical Data
Cinema 180 Film Descriptions
ESI 3-D with film description
ESI 3D Film
MagnaVision with Film Library
MagnaVision Film
MotionMaster with film programs
OmniVision with Film Library
OmniVision Film
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Production Facilities
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Magnavision's giant 6-story screen transforms a stadium, arena or convention
center into an astonishing media event. Your production will have resolution
and color intensity never before achieved on screens of this magnitude. Turn
your imagination loose. Picture from Omni Film's presentation folder
Camera format: All films are
produced with 65mm camera's owned by Omni and produced by Omni.
PROJECTION
Ultra-high resolution and crisp, bright images are the Omni Films standard.
Omni Films' precision projection systems can be customized to meet your
specific needs and applications:
570 and 870 formats
24 and 30 frames per second
4 to 12 KW xenon projection light sources
HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE
Extensive film libraries
Custom film production
Optical printing equipment for 1570/870 transfer with full frame integrity
maintained
Camera rentals for film production
Permanent or temporary theaters
Endless-loop projection cabinets for labor efficient operation and
extended film life
Seating layouts conforming to your design requirements
Show controls
Special in-theater effects Omni Films International, Inc
Projectors: are Ballantyne projectors with Rentec lamphouse.
Lamp-capacity 2500 W, 4500 W, 7000 W or 12.000 W (latest is water-cooled). Favorit 70
and Victoria 8 in Denmark.
Technology Simplified. Sophisticated 70mm film projection technology integrated into a simplified,
easy to manage system, can be operated by one person. Just plug it in and
push a button.
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Enclosed
70mm projector with endless loop 70mm print. Picture from Omni Film's
presentation folder
Advanced Optics. Your picture soars above and beyond the limits of peripheral vision.
Proprietary custom lenses make it possible to project onto a variety of
imaginative screen configurations from flat to spherical. No multi-camera
trickery. No split screens. An unforgettable experience for everyone who
sees it.
OmniSoundฎ
To enhance this extra-ordinary 70mm film experience, a powerful audio system
takes multi-track sound technology to the limit. Clean, transparent.
Why 70MM?
The 70mm film frame is 400 percent larger than 35mm. No other film format
offers the opportunity to deliver such massive amounts of visual information
with so much sharpness, color saturation and brightness.
The Power of Presentation
We write, produce and package the spectacular to hold your audience by their
eyes and ears and make them yours. Surround and stimulate their senses with
excitement and emotion. Take them for an unbelievable ride from the ocean
floor to mountaintops. Tell your corporate story, put your product on a
pedestal, or sway audiences to your point of view.
Year of Magic
Join the hundreds of imaginative business people around the world who have
millions of happy viewers coming back for more and more. Practical,
professional, frontline experience assures you of a successful,
cost-efficient film presentation and theater system. Our team consists of
skilled, technical innovators and creative filmmakers, dedicated to
commanding an audience's attention.
A Complete Service
We provide the production, the technology, the cinematic hardware, the
theater. Omni Films International cinematic experience and unique 70mm film
technology is available nowhere else. Position your program where you need
it. We do the rest. Then, take it on the road, exhibit at a convention
center, convert an existing structure or choose from a broad range of
permanent theater buildings custom designed for minimal maintenance and
maximum traffic flow.
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28-07-24 |
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