This right here! Haha, it's funny that so many people get lost in analytical pretentiousness, they don't even realize that 35mm film's original aspect ratio is 1:33:1, and nearly every film shown in 1:85:1 widescreen (before digital camera came along in the 21st century) were cropped (or matted, same thing). It really shows how little some people know about movie making.
In the 60s when Kubrick did Spartacus or 2001 he shot them in 2:20:1 or 2:35:1 widescreen because back in the 60s VHS wasn't a thing, and people really only saw films in theaters, so he wanted to give the audience the widescreen experience, as did a lot of other filmmakers back in the day. Most of Kubrick's other early films were either shot in 1:66:1 or 1:85:1 for artistic reasons. In the late 70s he probably started noticing that films shown on TV or tape were either being cropped or shown in open matte formats, so that's why his later films were shot in 1:85:1 widescreen, so his films could be shown in an open matte format and not fall victim to that horrid thing known as "pan and scan".
In the early 2000s when Warner Bros released his first batch of films on DVD they decided to keep it in 1:33:1 because most everyone back then had a square shaped TV. People thought this move was for pure Kubricky artistic reasons, and not the fact that Warner Bros. just wanted the film fit your TV screen. Then came 2006, and 16:9 TVs were starting to get manufactured and Blu-Ray discs were being released. There was a big uproar from Kubrick fans claiming that they went against his artistic intentions claiming that they merely just cropped the films to fit the 16:9 TVs, not realizing that the movies were always meant to be cropped in that aspect ratio. They didn't realize that all the films on Blu-Ray were being taken back to their intended source, even Clockwork Orange went back to 1:66:1 in its Blu-Ray release.
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