IMF vs DCP: Which Format Should You Use?

Understanding Interoperable Master Format and Digital Cinema Package—when each is required, distributor preferences, and how to choose.

What Is DCP?

A DCP (Digital Cinema Package) is a self-contained delivery format for theatrical exhibition. It includes the image file (in JPEG 2000 compression), sound files (in WAV format), and metadata in a specific folder structure defined by the Digital Cinema Initiatives (DCI). A DCP is screened in a digital cinema theater—the theater's projector reads the DCP and plays it exactly as mastered.

DCP has been the theatrical standard for 15+ years. Every digital cinema in the world can play a DCP.

DCP Strengths

DCP Limitations

What Is IMF?

IMF (Interoperable Master Format) is a flexible, modular delivery format designed to support multiple platforms, territories, and versions from a single master. IMF stores image, sound, and subtitle data separately in XML-described packages, allowing distributors to recombine elements for different outputs (theatrical DCP, streaming ProRes, international versions).

IMF is newer than DCP (standardized around 2012) and is increasingly required by major distributors for theatrical, streaming, and international releases.

IMF Strengths

IMF Limitations

When to Use DCP

When to Use IMF

Strategic Choice

The smart approach is to master in IMF, then generate theatrical DCP from the IMF if needed. This gives you the flexibility of IMF with the compatibility of DCP for theaters. The extra cost is minimal (DCP generation from IMF is fast), and the strategic flexibility is significant.

Related Resources

About the Author

Dale Tanguay is a Post-Production Supervisor with extensive experience mastering films in DCP, IMF, ProRes, and HDR formats for theatrical and streaming distribution. Contact Dale.