234 lines
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Plaintext
234 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: rec.arts.movies,rec.video.releases
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From: moriarty@tc.fluke.COM (Jeff Meyer)
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Subject: Summary of American Moving Image Archivists screening, 12/8/93
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Message-ID: <1993Jan24.071916.10547@tc.fluke.COM>
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Summary: Summary of restored and discovered films shown at AMIA Screening
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Keywords: AMIA, film restoration and archival
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Organization: The John Fluke Mfg. Co. /a.k.a. The Gizmonics Institute/
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Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 07:19:16 GMT
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Lines: 224
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Sometimes, you just happen to be in the right place at the right time, and
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are alerted to it by the right person. A very good friend I was visiting in
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Palo Alto last December pointed out that David Packard's Stanford theatre
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(the nicest movie theater on the face of the earth in appearance,
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restoration and choice of viewing matter, as far as I'm concerned; it's one
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of the two things I would move up from the Bay area to Seattle if I could)
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was hosting the American Moving Image Archivists members' clips from current
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subjects they were working on. The AMIA is made up of professionals who
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root out, restore and/or archive rare and significant films or television
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programs (on video or kinescope recordings); one of the members that will be
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best-known to film and video enthusiasts is the UCLA Film and Television
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Archive.
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Anyway, the AMIA was having it's annual convention, and after their dinner,
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David Packard had offered them the use of the Stanford for showing the
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"crown jewels" of their current projects to each other. However, he had
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stipulated that members of the public could attend (for free!!), and printed
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it up in the Stanford program. My friend, knowing of my mania for film
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history and restoration techniques (I collect laserdiscs; 'nuff said),
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generously offered to accompany me there for the evening. We arrived to the
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theater to discover that maybe 10 other Stanford film buffs had decided to
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attend. We had the pleasure of sitting and reading the AMIA program for the
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evening for 20 minutes while listening to one of the Stanford's talented
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organists played various tunes on the Mighty Wurlitzer Organ, until the AMIA
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members (dressed in tuxes and evening gowns) appeared. We felt a little
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guilty to have copped the best seats in the house from the paying members --
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but not too much. BTW, the Stanford is one of the last places on earth that
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has kept the art of a dramatic curtain-up for film. It is a pleasure to
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experience.
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Here's a rundown of the most interesting (to me) things we saw that evening;
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those interested in film preservation and restoration (as well as those in
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the video community wondering what new restored prints of films may appear
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on video) will be interested, I think. Each member's clip was limited to
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about 8 to 10 minutes, I believe.
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* The two opening shorts (from the San Francisco State University Library
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and the UCLA Film and Television Archive, respectively) were
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travelogues, the first from 1939 San Francisco, the second one of MGM's
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publicity records of the grand opening of GRAND HOTEL from 1932. The
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restoration on the latter was particularly impressive; however, outside
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of seeing various famous actors and actresses in a less "handled" manner
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than publicity shorts that came later, these were less interesting than
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what followed. (I had hoped to see a clip of something more interesting
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from UCLA.)
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* A company called Wolfson Media Center in Miami came up with a
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highly-amusing clip from a Miami news program from 1962 called FYI. The
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film was made in 1962, two months after the Cuban Missile Crisis, and was
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made up of on-the-street interviews with New Yorkers, asking them if
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they planned to change their plans to vacation in Miami after the
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problems with Cuba. The reporter was rather flowery in his speech, and
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the audience enjoyed it greatly; I was impressed to see how some of
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the smaller AMIA members, with less material to choose from, had an eye
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for something that, if not massively significant to film restoration,
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was entertaining to those attending the screening.
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* Hollywood Vaults, Inc., is a public storage facility for storing film
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and tape in secure, safe vaults. One of their clients is the estate of
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Abbott and Costello, who gave permission to show a wonderful sketch
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performed live on the Colgate Comedy Hour in 1952, and saved on
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kinescope. It is titled "The Diamond Necklace", and while one of the
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classic vaudeville acts, is accentuated by a sound man who had some
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trouble sticking to his cues -- which provides a good deal of
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unintentional humor, and has Bud and Lou almost losing it live, on
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nationwide television.
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* Southwest Film / Video Archives has discovered a print of Alfred
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Hitchcock's directing debut, THE PLEASURE GARDEN (they mention that a
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prior film, a 2-reeler, was never finished.) It is a silent production
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of a morality play, about two showgirls. As one would expect from a
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first production, little about it hints at the director's future, but
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the opening credits are extremely striking. According to records, the
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only other print in the world of this film is in the British Film
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Institute (along with "unidentified material" in the Belgian Film
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Archives.)
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* WGBH Education Foundation provided a host of early 60's video programs
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on public station WGBH; WGBH is currently evaluating what to do with a
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large amount of videotaped shows from their early years, which are
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nearing the end of their shelf life. Some fast clips from their
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archives that were shown: early Julia Childs "French Chef" episodes (I
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cannot watch these with a straight face after seeing Dan Ackroyd do
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Julia Childs on SNL years ago); a monologue (to the camera) by Jean
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Shepard; an interview from 1963 with James Baldwin; a speech by JFK at
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Amherst College in 1963; a special in 1964 on Robert Frost; "What's
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Happening, Mr. Silver", a 60's counter-culture program done by various
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lights of that generation, with tons of psychedelic montages and
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round-table discussions between noted revolutionaries (I could swear one
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was Abbie Hoffman, but I'm not sure) -- it all was rather embarrassingly
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dated; a conversation with Muhammad Ali in 1968; and James Brown performing
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at the Boston Garden, the day after Martin Luther King Jr. was killed.
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Very interesting stuff, to be sure.
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* The Museum of Modern Art showed the ending of ON THE WATERFRONT, from a
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new restored print initiated by the Sony-Columbia preservation program.
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The negative it was restored from had extensive sound damage. The sound
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and picture quality of the restored print we saw was absolutely
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top-drawer.
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* Eastman Kodak had brought in test films of their new digital film-making
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process; it opened with voice-overs by James Cameron and Harlan
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Ellinshaw describing how this would open up film-making into amazing new
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vistas. Unfortunately, Kodak under-estimated how much time they had to
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show their process at the screening, and showed the comparison of color
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between normal 35mm film and digital film-making (point: no difference
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to my eye), but ran out of time before showing the special effects
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capabilities of their digital process, which is really the reason d'etre
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of the whole shebang.
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* The Chicago Historical Society had come across an amusing kinescope of
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Kukla, Fran & Ollie describing how a kinescope works. Much spoofing of
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technical film and video terms, and the techies in the audience had a
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great time. Much fun for us rubes, as well.
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* The Japanese American National Museum had transferred a video program
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(shown in the museum on multiple laser discs) of home movies taken by
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first-generation Japanese Americans of their life in San Francisco and
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Tacoma, Washington during the late 1920's and early 1930s. A bit long,
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but fascinating stuff, particularly as one does not see much "home movie"
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footage from the late 20's these days.
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* The National Archives of Canada had two subjects, both amusing and
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educational: the first was a short news clip describing their trip to
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Australia where the CBC had discoved the last remaining evidence of a
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device described as the (I believe) "Blatnerphone" -- one of the
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earliest examples of recording audio on magnetic tape. A spool of the
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tape which had recorded CBC broadcasts during World War II had been
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found there, and they were anxious to find out what was on it.
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Apparently Lorne Greene was a newsreader for the BBC during WWII, and
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there has never been any recorded record of his reports during the war.
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However, the news clip never explained if Greene's voice was found or
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not.
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The second was a clip from a 1920 silent film called "Something New"; it
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was a typical silent western from the period, except for one thing: the
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film had almost entirely been financed by the Maxwell car company.
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Thus, the standard plot of such a melodrama (heroine gets kidnapped by
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outlaw villain, who has despicable plans for her, while hero rides to
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the rescue) is altered by one thing; instead of searching for the
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outlaws' hideout (situated in a boulder-strewn no-man's-land) on
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horseback, the stalwart young lad sallys forth in -- yes, you guessed it
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-- a Maxwell automobile. I will admit that the car seems pretty durable
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(the actor takes it into place I wouldn't go in a Land Rover), but it's
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a bit difficult to generate suspense when the hero seems to be
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riding to the rescue at a speed of about 40 feet every 10 minutes. The
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hero's dog, sitting in the back seat of the Maxwell, looks seasick even
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in black-and-white. Halfway through the show, David Packard motioned
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to the organist to accompany it, and he did a wonderful job of it,
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considering he'd never seen the film. Everyone in the crowd was rolling
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-- an excellent choice. [My favorite line: as the villain tries to
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convince the heroine to compromise her virtue, she valiantly turns up
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her nose, and the caption card reads "Never! I'm an American!" Next
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time, cast Madonna.]
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* The West Virginia State Archives, as you might expect, doesn't have
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anything of huge significance to the history of film; but they did show
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a number of interesting restored films of people camping in West
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Virginia during the 30's. (Along with an amusing 1966 UFO story.)
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* The International Museum of Photography at George Eastman House came up
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with two extremely interesting finds. First, last August, a fellow
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walked into George Eastman House in Rochester and dropped off three
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reels of nitrate film from *1903*, all made by the Edison Film Company,
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and all in nearly perfect condition. The two that were particularly
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exciting to hear about were a George Melies film "Une Indigestion / Up-
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To-Date Surgery", which we watched (lots of jump-cut special effects,
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just what you'd expect from Melies, but very charming); and an
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immaculate print of THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY, which we didn't get a
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chance to see. Yowsah!
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The other find was a collection of samples from a French company named
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the Caumont Film Company, which developed, in 1913, an additive color
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process, Gaumont Chronochromes, and made a number of test films to sell
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the system. I quote from the program: "Chronochromes have three black
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and white (YCM), wide-screen images (1:1.66) on a single strip of film
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which, through a system of filters and mirrors, were projected with a
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special Gaumont Chronochrome projector to produce a color image on the
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screen." It appears to be an early twist on three-strip Technicolor;
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however, the results were very unusual in the clip we saw. A woman in
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the latest fashion of the day was seated; she and her surroundings were
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a rather sepia-colored tone, but the hat on here head, and her blouse
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and skirt, were colored in very bright, almost neon colors. It reminded
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me of a moving black-light poster. George Eastman House says they have
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other Gaumont Chronochrome titles (approximately 30), and plan to
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restore them all.
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* Turner Entertainment finished up the official program for the evening,
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with a sequence from THE WIZARD OF OZ where the clip cut between
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three-strip Technicolor, and Eastman Color. I could almost always tell
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when they'd switched from Eastman Color to Technicolor, but had more
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trouble determining when they switched back to Eastman Color.
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Interesting.
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* An unannounced item at the end (along with the Blatnerphone clip):
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someone (I don't know who) is restoring Sam Pekinpah' MAJOR DUNDEE -- a
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full restoration of the director's cut, putting in much of the scenes
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that were cut out before it got to the viewer. However, the project is
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in the very early stages. The clips we saw were gorgeous, though.
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The AMIA conference opened with David Packard jokingly announcing that the
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only way he had allowed the AMIA to put that "damned video equipment" (the
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videotape projectors which projected the videotaped parts of the
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presentations on the big screen) was that he got to show a 35mm restored clip
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of the "Sheik of Araby" sequence from TIN PAN ALLEY -- the one with The
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Nicholas Brothers do absolutely amazing tap-dancing, and Betty Grable and
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Alice Faye giving the boo-ba-doo treatment to Jack Oakie in the title role
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of the bit. Absolutely immaculate, and using black-and-white film to an
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almost luminescent effect. An excellent way to end a very interesting
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evening; Palo Alto is lucky to have the Stanford, and David Packard.
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DAVE BARRY'S 1992 IN REVIEW -- February 7th
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"President Bush, responding to allegations
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that his use of the potent sleeping-pill
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Halcion has caused him to act erratically,
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angrily tells reporters that they are `big
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Methodist spiders.'"
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---
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Moriarty, aka Jeff Meyer
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INTERNET: moriarty@tc.fluke.COM
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Manual UUCP: {uunet, uw-beaver, sun, microsoft}!fluke!moriarty
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CREDO: You gotta be Cruel to be Kind...
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**>> Keep circulating the tapes <<**
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