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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IMAXIMAX - Wikipedia

    Graeme Ferguson, Roman Kroitor, Robert Kerr, and William C. Shaw were the co-founders of what would be named the IMAX Corporation (founded in September 1967 as Multiscreen Corporation, Ltd.), and they developed the first IMAX cinema projection standards in the late 1960s and early 1970s in Canada.

    • IMAX Corporation
  2. The company was founded in 1967 when three filmmakers— Graeme Ferguson, Roman Kroitor and Robert Kerr —incorporated IMAX Corporation. The idea and the new technology, which resulted in the birth of the company, came from the multi-screen productions of Roman Kroitor, Colin Low and Hugh O'Connor. In the Labyrinth [10] and Ferguson's Man and ...

  3. Jul 25, 2023 · IMAX, or ‘Image Maximum’, was a groundbreaking innovation developed by a group of Canadian filmmakers in the late 1960s. As a technological marvel, IMAX is both a film format and a set of cinema projection standards created by the Canadian company IMAX Corporation.

  4. Dec 3, 2012 · Toronto-based IMAX Corporation is the world's most successful large-screen cinema system. Since its origins as Multi-Screen Corporation in 1967, IMAX has developed and operated many technologies aimed at an audience's complete immersion into the film experience.

  5. He is a renowned filmmaker and co-inventor of IMAX, a concept that came out of Expo ’67 in Montreal and has grown into a network of more than 660 IMAX theatres in 52 countries.

  6. Dec 3, 2007 · Following the presentation of his multi-screen production Polar Life, produced with Roman Kroitor and Robert Kerr at Expo 67 in Montréal, the collaborators, along with engineer William Shaw, began developing what would become the IMAX (an adaptation of the term "maximum image") film format.

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  8. Oct 22, 2021 · In 1970, Tiger Child (Donald Brittain), the first IMAX film, was shown at Expo 70 in Osaka, Japan, and the following year the first permanent IMAX system was installed at the Cinesphere Theater in Toronto, debuting in May 1971 with the travelogue North of Superior (Graeme Ferguson).

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