Godzilla | 1998 Open Matte

If you are a purist who believes in a director’s intended framing, stick with the 2.39:1 Blu-ray. Roland Emmerich framed the movie to hide the seams of the effects and to keep the action horizontal.

However, if you are a , a completionist , or someone who loves the artifact of home media history, the Godzilla 1998 Open Matte is essential viewing. It is a time capsule of 35mm filmmaking. It reminds us that what we see in the theater is not the whole picture—literally. Godzilla 1998 Open Matte

There are scenes in the Open Matte version that contain genuine content cut off in every other release. For instance, during the final chase sequence, the widescreen cuts off the top of the Chrysler Building. The Open Matte restores the iconic spire. For film historians, this is a time capsule of late-90s VFX layout. If you are a purist who believes in

Conversely, fans of the animated series that followed (which was vastly superior to the film) love the Open Matte version because it preserves the scale of the creature design that the cartoon later utilized. The answer depends on your priorities. It is a time capsule of 35mm filmmaking

Many viewers argue that the Open Matte version feels more immersive on modern 16:9 monitors. If you zoom a 2.39 image to fill a 16:9 screen, you lose the sides. But the Open Matte fits a 16:9 screen natively without cropping the horizontal information. It turns the movie into a pseudo-IMAX experience.