Wide So Serious?

The above screenshot is taken from the final episode of Mobile Fighter G Gundam during the climactic battle against the Devil Gundam. The shot is done in a sort of cinematic, widescreen format, though G Gundam itself is a standard pre-digital 4:3 aspect ratio. While the way the image is framed would still make it too wide to fit perfectly within the now-standard 16:9 video format, it got me thinking about just how much the art of television is possibly changing now that widescreen is the standard.

“It’s just a little extra space!” you might say, or perhaps, “It’s just a little less space!” But framing the shot is one of the most fundamentally important aspects of any video or cinema, and now you literally have a point at which the game is changing, where there is a definite dividing point between “then” and “now.” Even now you can see it in the way anime is being made. Shows that have gone on for multiple seasons during this transitional period have older episodes as standard definition but newer ones as widescreen.

What subtle psychological effects on the human mind might this all have in the years to come?

In the future, if you tell a child to draw a TV, will they draw the screens roughly 16:9?

Will some shows purposely use a 4:3 aspect ratio to give the image a “retro” appearance? Will it be a tool used like the G Gundam screenshot at the beginning of this post?

I think we are going to see a subtle shift in the art of television, and by extension animation. The effects won’t be entirely immediate, but in time we will realize its profound impact on the way we look at the screen.

4 thoughts on “Wide So Serious?

  1. I was watching Turn A Gundam, and the version I had stretched the picture to 16:9 ratio. It looked weird at first, but I got used to it. Suddenly, with 10 episodes to go, the episodes returned to 4:3 and it totally threw me off! Here’s how it’s supposed to look, yet I couldn’t get used to these slimmer characters whose widefaces I had grown to love.

    Like

  2. “In the future, if you tell a child to draw a TV, will they draw the screens roughly 16:9?

    Will some shows purposely use a 4:3 aspect ratio to give the image a “retro” appearance?”

    Whoa, I never thought of that! Trippy…

    Like

Leave a reply to kadian1364 Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.