By December 1953, the majority of important theaters had adapted to widescreen. Sub-run and neighborhood houses were still running in standard Academy, which is why these shorts were protected for that ratio. The film would have been printed in 1.37 but projected with a 1.85 aperture plate in the gate. It was up to the competence of the projectionist to frame properly. In the case of GOOF ON THE ROOF, they would have framed it so the tops of heads on medium shots would be the edge of the upper screen masking.
Bob, thanks for posting all this information. I have a few logistical questions if I may, about the placement of the 1.85 plate during the early days of widescreen, so please bear with me as I have no background in theater projection
Would a projector operator in 1953 actually take the effort to align the 1.85 plate with a character's head for a single scene? I would think this would be overkill for showing a 2-reeler during that era. Wouldn't most operators simply align the plate with the center of the 1.37 print, especially if the titles themselves were in the center? Otherwise, wouldn't they risk cutting off some of the text during the opening credits?
Unless the plate/projector were somehow movable during the presentation. But then the projectionist would have had to have logged each movement of the apeture prior to the first public screening, then used a stopwatch to determine when during the film to move the plate or projector. Either that or have an incredible memory. Was, or is, this ever done? That seems like a lot of responsibility for a movie studio to defer to individual theaters and projectionists (not all of whom would have been as knowledgeable about the craft as someone like Bob, e.g. some houses no doubt just yanked the cashier from the popcorn stand or the theater owner's nephew to do it)
As far as my thoughts on a "do-over" of Vol 7, Disc 2. I can live with "Goof on the Roof" the way it's constituted. However, the 3-D shorts look terrible to me, basically unwatchable. They are horribly pixelated and it's like watching them with my pupils dilated... serious double-vision! I wonder if this is due to the fact that I have to wear the 3-D glasses over my real glasses... would that cause a "double-vision" effect for me?
I think if Sony does re-issue Volume 7 Disc 2 it should be via a mail-away, similar to what Warners did with the Superman DVDs and what Universal did with the Back to the Future trilogy. I got my Superman replacement discs this way, and it was no hassle at all, and if you run into problems the studios usually provide an 800-number along with the address where you can call if you don't get your disc... so I'm not sure what the apprehension there is. I don't believe the right move is to make a consumer buy a totally different set of DVDs to get a corrected version of a film from an earlier set. Plus, the general home video viewer will just be confused by it.