Godzilla 1998 Open Matte Extra Quality Official
Director Roland Emmerich and cinematographer Karl Walter Lindenlaub composed the film specifically for a widescreen 2.39:1 aspect ratio to create a cinematic, "epic" feel.
The Open Matte version emphasizes how much of the film relies on humor and human reaction shots. Because you see more of the ground, you see more New Yorkers running. Because you see more sky, you see more of the military helicopters. Some argue this makes the film feel more like Emmerich’s Independence Day (a disaster film) than a traditional Kaiju film. Godzilla 1998 Open Matte
When Godzilla was released on DVD, studios faced a dilemma. Many consumers still had 4:3 CRT televisions (the square boxes). While "widescreen" DVDs existed, many retailers stocked "Full Screen" versions because average viewers hated "black bars." Because you see more sky, you see more
The most critical revelation of the Open Matte transfer is its effect on the film’s miniature work. In widescreen, the miniatures (bridges, subways, fish markets) are cropped horizontally, often hiding their upper edges. In Open Matte, the viewer sees the ceiling of the sets and the sky above the miniatures. Ironically, this top-down exposure reduces the illusion of scale. By seeing the framing edges of the practical environments, the audience recognizes the constructed tiering of the sets, making Godzilla seem smaller, not larger. However, for the CGI model, the Open Matte provides atmospheric scale, allowing audiences to track Z-axis movement (depth) more effectively during the helicopter pursuit sequences. Many consumers still had 4:3 CRT televisions (the