IMAX 70mm, 70mm, Dolby Vision, 35mm:

Which Format Should You Watch The Odyssey In?

Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey hits theaters July 17, 2026, and it’s making film history: it’s the first narrative feature shot entirely with IMAX film cameras. Matt Damon stars as Odysseus, joined by Anne Hathaway, Zendaya, Tom Holland, Lupita Nyong’o, and Charlize Theron in Nolan’s adaptation of Homer’s epic.

But here’s the thing — how you watch this movie matters more than almost any film in recent memory. Nolan and cinematographer Hoyte van Hoytema designed every frame for the biggest screen possible, and the difference between formats is dramatic. Here’s your guide.

Why This Movie Is a Technical Milestone

Nolan has been shooting with IMAX cameras since The Dark Knight, but the cameras were always too noisy for dialogue-heavy scenes. For The Odyssey, his team developed a new sound-dampening enclosure (nicknamed “the blimp”) around the IMAX camera. The new rig — named “The Keighley” after longtime IMAX executives Patricia and David Keighley — weighed roughly 300–400 pounds and needed a film reload every two to three minutes.

The payoff: for the first time ever, an entire Hollywood feature — including intimate close-ups and quiet dialogue — was captured on IMAX 65mm film. Nolan even skipped the digital intermediate, striking IMAX projection prints chemically, straight from the negative.

The Formats, Ranked

1. IMAX 70mm Film (15/70) — The Gold Standard

This is how Nolan intends the film to be seen. The 1.43:1 expanded aspect ratio fills IMAX’s floor-to-ceiling screen — no black bars, no cropping. Each frame has 15 perforations and runs horizontally through the projector, making it the largest, highest-resolution projection format in existence — an effective resolution often estimated around 18K.

Nolan describes the experience as the screen “disappearing” — 3D without the glasses, filling your peripheral vision entirely.

The catch: only about 30 theaters in the U.S. and 9 in Canada can project it. In the LA area, that means AMC Universal CityWalk — and shows are selling out weeks in advance, with premium tickets running $30+.

2. IMAX with Laser (Digital)

If you can’t get to a 15/70 film theater, IMAX’s 4K laser projection is the next best thing. Select GT dual-laser locations show the full 1.43:1 aspect ratio; most others present 1.90:1, which is still noticeably taller than a standard theater image. It won’t match the sharpness of the film print, but brightness and contrast are excellent.

3. 70mm Film (5/70)

Traditional 70mm — five perforations, running vertically through the projector — presents the film at 2.20:1. You lose the extra vertical image of IMAX, but you get genuine celluloid projection with more than double the resolution of 35mm, rich analog color, and beautiful detail. Fewer than 25 theaters worldwide can run it. If you’re a film purist without an IMAX 70mm venue nearby, this is a fantastic option.

4. Dolby Vision / Dolby Cinema

Dolby’s HDR laser projection delivers a 1,000,000:1 contrast ratio with pinpoint color accuracy. You’ll see the film at 2.39:1 (Cinema Scope) or 1.85:1 depending on the auditorium. You don’t get the expanded IMAX frame, but the black levels and dynamic range are unmatched among digital formats — plus Dolby Atmos sound.

5. 35mm Film

The classic theatrical experience: four perforations, vertical transport, 2.39:1 aspect ratio. Genuine analog character, though at a fraction of the resolution of the large formats.

6. Standard Digital

Every other theater gets the standard 2K/4K digital presentation at 2.39:1. Still Nolan, still epic — but you’ll see roughly 40% less image than IMAX 70mm audiences during expanded-ratio scenes.

The Quick Answer

  • Best possible experience: IMAX 70mm film (1.43:1) — worth a drive if one of the ~40 North American theaters is within reach
  • Best widely available option: IMAX with Laser
  • Best for film lovers without IMAX 70mm access: 5-perf 70mm
  • Best digital picture quality outside IMAX: Dolby Vision

Aspect Ratio Cheat Sheet

Format Aspect Ratio Media IMAX 70mm (15/70) 1.43:1 Film IMAX with Laser (GT dual) 1.43:1 Digital 4K IMAX with Laser (standard) 1.90:1 Digital 4K 70mm (5/70) 2.20:1 Film Dolby Vision 2.39:1 or 1.85:1 Digital HDR 35mm 2.39:1 Film Standard Digital 2.39:1 Digital

Final Thoughts

The Odyssey is a once-in-a-generation projection event. Nolan spent years solving the engineering problems that made an all-IMAX feature impossible, and the result is a film that literally cannot be fully seen on most screens. If there’s ever been a movie worth the extra effort — and the extra ticket price — to see in its native format, this is it.

The Odyssey opens July 17, 2026, with early screenings starting July 16.

loading
×