The most explosive component of this version is "Superwide Open Matte Top." To understand this, you need a quick history lesson.
Jurassic Park was shot on 35mm film using spherical (flat) lenses, not anamorphic. The intended theatrical ratio was 1.85:1. To achieve this, the filmmakers "matted" (masked) the top and bottom of the frame in the projector.
However, the camera negative captured a much larger image area: roughly 1.33:1 (Academy ratio) or 1.37:1.
The "Open Matte" version reveals that hidden real estate. Specifically, "Superwide Open Matte Top" suggests a custom regrade where the scanner has opened the aperture to reveal the maximum amount of image data from the top of the frame—data that has been cropped out of every home video release since 1993.
🎞️ Jurassic Park – 35mm Open Matte 1080p Cinema DTS 🦖
Not the Blu-ray. Not the 4K remaster. This is a direct scan of a 35mm theatrical print, presented in its original open matte aspect ratio (approx 1.78:1) with Cinema DTS audio via timecode sync.
✅ Full frame – more picture top & bottom
✅ Original 1993 color timing
✅ Uncompressed theatrical DTS dynamics
✅ No DNR – pure film grain
⚠️ This is a fan preservation project. For educational/comparison purposes only.
🔊 Headphones or surround system recommended for full DTS effect.
📽️ Scanned at 1080p/24 from 35mm print (low-gen).
Compare with the official 2.35:1 version and see what’s been hidden for 30 years.
Jurassic Park 35mm 1080p Version Cinema Dts Superwide Open Matte Top Site
1. "Jurassic Park 35mm"
2. "1080p version"
3. "Cinema DTS"
4. "Superwide"
5. "Open Matte"
6. "Top"
The most explosive component of this version is "Superwide Open Matte Top." To understand this, you need a quick history lesson.
Jurassic Park was shot on 35mm film using spherical (flat) lenses, not anamorphic. The intended theatrical ratio was 1.85:1. To achieve this, the filmmakers "matted" (masked) the top and bottom of the frame in the projector.
However, the camera negative captured a much larger image area: roughly 1.33:1 (Academy ratio) or 1.37:1. 5. "Open Matte"
The "Open Matte" version reveals that hidden real estate. Specifically, "Superwide Open Matte Top" suggests a custom regrade where the scanner has opened the aperture to reveal the maximum amount of image data from the top of the frame—data that has been cropped out of every home video release since 1993.
🎞️ Jurassic Park – 35mm Open Matte 1080p Cinema DTS 🦖
Not the Blu-ray. Not the 4K remaster. This is a direct scan of a 35mm theatrical print, presented in its original open matte aspect ratio (approx 1.78:1) with Cinema DTS audio via timecode sync.
✅ Full frame – more picture top & bottom
✅ Original 1993 color timing
✅ Uncompressed theatrical DTS dynamics
✅ No DNR – pure film grain
⚠️ This is a fan preservation project. For educational/comparison purposes only. 3. "Cinema DTS"
🔊 Headphones or surround system recommended for full DTS effect.
📽️ Scanned at 1080p/24 from 35mm print (low-gen).
Compare with the official 2.35:1 version and see what’s been hidden for 30 years.