My advice: the best seat in a real IMAX theater...
...is to sit somewhere other than in a real IMAX theater.
I saw it last night at the Cradle of Aviation Museum on Long Island, true IMAX, sitting just below the projector dead center, and I almost had to walk out. The film is just too big, too busy, and too wide as well (the "Iowa" and "Vulcan" captions were almost invisible off to the far left). Any action scene became one big blur; it was impossible to see enough of the screen at one time to get a sense of what was occurring. I essentially missed the entire fight on the platform over Vulcan, not because I was closing my eyes, but because it was moving too fast to see the characters.
I wasn't alone; most of the people there seemed to be more nauseated than entralled (and one person apparently actually threw up, somewhere near the top).
I'm going to see it again on a *smaller*, flat screen, hopefully to enjoy the experience rather than having to close my eyes every few minutes to recover.
...is to sit somewhere other than in a real IMAX theater.
I saw it last night at the Cradle of Aviation Museum on Long Island, true IMAX, sitting just below the projector dead center, and I almost had to walk out. The film is just too big, too busy, and too wide as well (the "Iowa" and "Vulcan" captions were almost invisible off to the far left). Any action scene became one big blur; it was impossible to see enough of the screen at one time to get a sense of what was occurring. I essentially missed the entire fight on the platform over Vulcan, not because I was closing my eyes, but because it was moving too fast to see the characters.
I wasn't alone; most of the people there seemed to be more nauseated than entralled (and one person apparently actually threw up, somewhere near the top).
I'm going to see it again on a *smaller*, flat screen, hopefully to enjoy the experience rather than having to close my eyes every few minutes to recover.