Casablanca (1942) Technical Specifications » ShotOnWhat? The movie Casablanca, released in 1942 and directed by Michael Curtiz, was shot on film using Mitchell BNC Camera with Arthur Edeson as cinematographer and editing by Owen Marks
Casablanca UHD Review - Home Theater Forum First and foremost – would the theater be able to screen it in its original Academy aspect ratio (1 37:1) or be forced to crop to either 1 85:1 or worse, 2:1 (all but one screen at the complex had fixed 2:1 screens)? Luckily, Casablanca was projected and presented in its full 1 37:1 aspect ratio
Casablanca – 4K UHD Blu-ray Screenshots - HighDefDiscNews The Movie Uses: 55 0 GB Aspect Ratio: 1 37:1 HDR Form (s): HDR10 Click on thumbnails for full-sized images lossless PNG image format This set of screenshots: 27 total Blu-ray vs 4K Screenshots Comparison REVIEW COMING SOON 4K UHD Blu-ray Screenshots: Blu-ray vs 4K Screenshots Comparison: SOURCES: 2012 Blu-ray (left), 2022 4K UHD Blu-ray (right)
Casablanca [4K UHD] (1942) - dvdmg. com Casablanca appears in an aspect ratio of 1 37:1 on this 4K UHD Disc This was an impressive presentation Sharpness felt appealing Any softness that occurred came from the source, usually due to some light soft focus used for Ingrid Bergman These instances created no distractions, as overall definition was strong
Casablanca – Colorized Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Paul Henreid . . . Casablanca – Colorized (DVD) 1942 Shown in original aspect ratio 1 37:1 Approx 102 min Playable in North America (the US, Canada, Mexico, etc ) Starring: Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Paul Henreid, Claude Rains, Conrad Veidt, Sydney Greenstreet, Peter Lorre
Casablanca 4K Blu-ray (80th Anniversary Edition) According to a trusted source, the best-remaining element -- and the one primarily used for both masters -- is a nitrate fine grain master positive created in 1942 and not Casablanca 's original
Warwick Student Cinema – Film Information: Casablanca (1942) Casablanca regularly appears on lists of the greatest films ever made, and it’s not hard to see why It’s part political thriller, part war drama, and part love story, with some of the most memorable scenes and lines ever put to film, and still captivates audiences 80+ years later