Disney+'s next major app update, coming to all devices later this week, continues the service's latest efforts to please nitpicky A/V obsessors with a new screen ratio format meant to fill more of your HDTV screen in a way that filmmakers originally intended.
"IMAX Digital" is coming to all devices that support Disney+ starting this Friday as part of the service's "Disney+ Day" promotion. This "17.1:9" format will land exclusively on 13 Marvel Studios films to start, and the move coincides with the streaming premiere of Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings—a film that skipped Disney's experiment with simultaneous launches in theaters and on Disney+ earlier this year.
Here's the full list of IMAX Digital-compatible films coming to Disney+ later this week:
- Ant-Man and the Wasp
- Avengers: Endgame
- Avengers: Infinity War
- Black Panther
- Black Widow
- Captain America: Civil War
- Captain Marvel
- Doctor Strange
- Guardians of the Galaxy
- Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
- Iron Man
- Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings
- Thor: Ragnarok
When a film switches to an IMAX Digital ratio, the usual black bars that signify a wider-screen 21:9 ratio will be reduced, adding approximately 26 percent more image to your HDTV, all framed as originally intended.
A quick “lie-max” primer
Anyone who appreciates film aspect ratios may immediately raise an eyebrow upon seeing the words "IMAX Digital," which is not the same as IMAX's original 1.43:1 ratio. IMAX's first format debuted in the 1970s with designs on projecting its 70 mm reels on larger, square-ratio screens. The corporation's move toward more average multiplex theaters included a shift in the 2000s to the wider IMAX Digital format, but this tactic failed, as viewers could see the difference between the 2K digital projections and the original format's pristine 70 mm foundation.
As a result, moviegoers began using the phrase "lie-max" to refer to this newer format—and the higher ticket prices it commanded. (This sentiment showed up in a 2015 Ars comment section about the IMAX Corporation threatening legal action over its trademark.)