
Even  though 35mm film dominated the film industry for years and years, the  majority of movies released to theaters were much wider than the stock's  4:3 aspect ratio. But instead of sacrificing resolution and simply  cropping off the top and bottom of a frame to make it widescreen,  filmmakers used special lenses that squeezed a wider vista onto the 35mm  film stock, and then unsqueezed the images when they were being  projected. They were known as anamorphic lenses, and soon you'll be able to get one for your iPhone.
What  looks like one of the many external lenses you can get for your  smartphone is actually one of the first to do an anamorphic squeeze on  your footage, letting you shoot video that's approximately 33 percent  wider than the iPhone's standard field of vision.
ExpandSo  if you're shooting video in an old-school 4:3 aspect ratio, when the  footage was unsqueezed in your video editor it would have a wider 16:9  vista. And if you're shooting in 16:9 to start with, the resulting  footage would have an even wider and more majestic 2.4:1 aspect ratio.  For still images the iPhone's panoramic mode easily accomplishes this,  but this is currently the only way to pull it off for video.
The  anamorphic adapter lens is currently raising funds on Kickstarter, and  with a pledge of $85 or more you can claim one of the first production  units when they're available sometime closer to March of next year. In  the meantime, you'll have to keep stomaching the limited 16:9 videos you  can shoot with your phone, or go out and buy yourself a proper 35mm  movie camera. [Kickstarter via DPReview]
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