4: Screens large and small
Cinema is scale. Last spring, I saw again Hitchcock’s gothic thriller Rebecca on the towering 40ft.-tall screen of a classic movie palace, Loew’s Jersey Theatre in Jersey City, N.J. (where a skinny teen named Sinatra grooving to Bing in concert had an epiphany and found his calling). Perhaps it was the antiquated 1.33 aspect ratio that made Hitch’s silvery black-and-white images appear to loom far above. Certainly it was the fact I sat up front, every dimension of my peripheral vision occupied by the magnificent 50ft. wide "display."
Rebecca, produced by David O. Selznick and adapted from Daphne du Maurier’s novel of the same name, hardly lacks for dramatic force. It starred Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine and collected two Oscars out of 11 nominations in 1940. It plays on Turner Classic Movies often enough to be familiar to many. But no television can convey the full measure of its cinematic intensity or sheer graphic power, which verge on the operatic. more







