Why do the edges of newer films blur?

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Why do the edges of newer films blur?

I frequently find the edges (maybe 10 to 15% on the left and right sides) blur in newer movies. When I say newer, I mean movies not from the eighties or nineties but the last couple of decades. I assume it has something to do with films shot digitally. I’ve seen this on multiple TVs, mine are between 55 and 75″ 4K HDR using a 4K UHD Blu-Ray player but I’ve also seen it on streaming services and in theaters. Unfortunately I don’t have an example on hand.

In: Technology

4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Right now, because digital cinema cameras are so detailed and sharp, it’s in-style for cinematographers to use really old ‘vintage’ lenses that tend to be softer / more out of focus generally to sort of compensate for that artistically.

These older lenses tend to be especially soft at the edges, never achieving perfect focus there.

If they wanted to, they could use modern, sharp lenses that didn’t do this. It’s basically an aesthetic choice.

Anonymous 0 Comments

maybe its just how digital cameras work now. they focus more on the center and edges get less love. kinda like me in group projects. but hey at least the center looks dope

Anonymous 0 Comments

maybe it is the fact that they are using anamorphic lenses
this video shows examples of how The Mandalorian uses them and causes blur on the sides
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLRUqPeDnKE](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pLRUqPeDnKE)

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s called a vignette blur or peripheral blur. It’s an aesthetic choice to make something look vintage by intentionally introducing a blur.