Film gauge
Film gauge is a physical property of photographic or motion picture film stock which defines its width. Traditionally, the major movie film gauges are 8 mm, 16 mm, 35 mm, and 65/70 mm. There have been other historic gauges in the past, especially in the silent era, most notably 9.5 mm film, as well as a panoply of others ranging from 3 mm to 75 mm.
Larger film gauge is generally associated with higher image quality, higher image detail, greater materials expense, heavier camera equipment, larger and most costly projection equipment, as well as greater bulk and weight for distribution and storage.
Size comparison between different film gauges
| Format | Gauge | Orientation | Perfs | Aspect Ratio | Notable For |
| Super 8 | 8mm | Vertical | 1 | 1.33:1 | Home movies, nostalgia |
| Standard 8 | 8mm | Vertical | 1 | 1.33:1 | Early amateur use |
| Standard 16 | 16mm | Vertical | 1 | 1.33:1 | Docs, newsreels |
| Super 16 | 16mm | Vertical | 1 | 1.66:1 – 1.85:1 | Indie film, TV |
| 4-Perf 35mm | 35mm | Vertical | 4 | 1.37:1 / 2.39:1 | Industry standard |
| 3-Perf 35mm | 35mm | Vertical | 3 | 1.85:1 | Efficient widescreen |
| 2-Perf 35mm | 35mm | Vertical | 2 | 2.39:1 | Techniscope, budget |
| VistaVision | 35mm | Horizontal | 8 | 1.50:1 | High-res, VFX |
| Dynavision | 70mm | Vertical | 8 | 1.39:1 | Rare large-frame format |
| 5-Perf 70mm | 70mm | Vertical | 5 | 2.20:1 | Epic cinema |
| IMAX | 70mm | Horizontal | 15 | 1.43:1 | Ultra-large format |