This was the norm for 70mm roadshow screenings. West Side Story actually had visuals for its overture sequence, but I believe this was fairly unusual and the standard practice was to keep the curtains closed until the end of the overture. Von Trier tried to bring this back for Dancer in the Dark but was told that too many U.S. theaters had been automated to make it viable there, so the American release got the opening montage of Per Kirkeby paintings instead.Never Cursed wrote: Tue Aug 19, 2025 4:23 pm A bunch of it is just technical information that is only relevant to projectionists or historians thereof, but there are some interesting little details, like how West Side Story's overture (about the first 5 minutes of reel 1) was supposed to be played with the house lights up
The above practice creates issues for certain analyses of 2001 that hinge in part on the black screen used for the overture on most video releases, though since that was presumably approved by Kubrick I guess you could still make an argument based upon it. (Rob Ager has a video somewhere where he claims the black screen represents the monolith.) Apparently original 70mm prints had clear film during the overture, so if it were projected the audience would just be looking at a blank white cinema screen.



