Jack Theakston wrote:... this is the only time you'll here me say this, try to go see this digitally. I saw it in 35mm and felt the presentation was compromised somewhat by poor timing on color stock. B&W on color stock isn't impossible, and has actually been done several times in the last ten years to great effect. Unfortunately, we're now in an era in which the labwork done today is at its worst, and this print woefully reflected that. One reel of the film I viewed was downright sepia-toned. For you tech geeks, it's a 1.33 pillarboxed in a 1.85 frame. I do wonder if there are any special-venue prints that are full-aperture.
Seems odd they wouldn't print it on B&W stock, unless there are come color effects somewhere. When I ran SCHINDLER'S LIST (admittedly almost 20 years ago now!) we first got a B&W print with the color shots spliced in, and it looked gorgeous. Later we got a print that was entirely on color stock and it looked softer, a bit dupier, like it was an extra generation or two away. The CASABLANCA revival in the late 80s, was on B&W stock and looked fine. However, a 35mm B&W print of CITIZEN KANE that I ran in the 90s looked dupier than the 16mm originals I'd seen. I can't remember whether THE MAN WHO WASN'T THERE or GOOD NIGHT AND GOOD LUCK were on B&W or color stock, but they sure looked like great classic black-and-white film on the big screen, as did SIN CITY, which was shot digitially but I saw projected on 35mm color film stock (due to its color effects). I wonder if certain major directors have the clout to approve the final lab work, whereas others have to live with what they get.
I wonder also, hypothetically, whether studios are encouraging sloppy lab work to promote how much better the digital versions look (and help convince theatres to invest in digital projection systems as quickly as possible), since proper 35mm lab work projected properly would clearly demonstrate how superior 35mm film is to the typical 2K digital cinema setups. Or maybe the labs figure they've only got another year or two to remain in business so they just don't care anymore.