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Cosm Domes brings Harry Potter world to life

Food Hall is seen at the 'Warner Bros Studio Tour Tokyo — The Making of Harry Potter' during a press preview in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters
Food Hall is seen at the 'Warner Bros Studio Tour Tokyo — The Making of Harry Potter' during a press preview in Tokyo, Japan. — Reuters
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⁠Transforming family movie nights into enveloping spectacles and offering viewers a ringside seat ​for sports, US-based ​Cosm Domes want to give their customers a new kind of immersive entertainment: a towering LED dome.


"It feels like being inside the film. It feels real", Jay Rinsky, founder and CEO of Little Cinema, the creative studio behind what Cosm calls its "shared ⁠reality experiences", said.


Cosm has so far opened Domes in Los ⁠Angeles and Dallas, with further venues planned for Atlanta, Detroit and Cleveland.


Screenings are paired with themed food and drinks and photo opportunities; and fans are encouraged to ‌dress as their favourite characters.


For instance, when ​watching the shared ⁠reality version of the film "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's ​Stone", created in partnership with Warner ‌Bros, the audience can also drink a butterbeer, a fizzy beverage with a butterscotch flavour that's ​a favourite of Hogwarts students.


"Shared reality combines the physical — with all of us together — and digital technology", said Alexis Scalice, Cosm's vice president of business development and entertainment.


Little Cinema and Warner Bros Pictures launched their multi-film collaboration in ‌2025 with immersive screenings of "The Matrix", followed by "Willy Wonka and ​the Chocolate Factory".


The screening of the first "Harry Potter" marks the 25th anniversary of ​the ‌film ⁠that first brought the J K Rowling books about the boy wizard to the silver screen.


Cosm's technology seeks to create the next generation ​of experience, with visuals that make audiences feel ⁠as though they're flying ​through Hogwarts or playing Quidditch on broomsticks.


Rinsky said the process was complex and years in the making. The biggest challenge, he said, was adapting a traditional rectangular film frame to fit a dome, a ​creative leap that helped define what cinema could be.


"The film ​is always the hero and we're adding emotional enhancement through visual storytelling", Rinsky said. — Reuters


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