How Technicolor changed movies

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,9 тис.

  • @Daniel-ht4wr
    @Daniel-ht4wr 7 років тому +4988

    My grandfather told me that when the Wizard of Oz came out everyone was super stocked to see a film in colour, but when it began it was in black and white everyone in the cinema was pissed off lol

    • @ElfriedeRose
      @ElfriedeRose 7 років тому +416

      Daniel Tracey for a birthday party we watched young frankenstein but one of my friends didnt want to watch it in black and white so we promised her that it goes to color at the end.

    • @AHHHHHHHHHHHHl
      @AHHHHHHHHHHHHl 6 років тому +475

      I can't imagine how amazing it must've felt when Dorothy entered the Land of Oz, but I can imagine how pissed the people who saw it in the cinema must've been when it was broadcast through one of the early television sets that could only display black and white.

    • @philgiglio9656
      @philgiglio9656 6 років тому +83

      Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid was begun in sepia...the lady behind me in the theater was pi88ed that it wasn't color: she wanted to see Paul's baby blues.

    • @colephelps6202
      @colephelps6202 5 років тому +21

      Wow! You go waay back. I only saw that film 2nd run at the drive-in with my parents!

    • @moirbasso7051
      @moirbasso7051 5 років тому +115

      I grew up watching this movie only in black and white (on TV). I literally pushed back away from the screen into my movie chair seat, when, at 18, I saw the film for the first time... in color. The witch was GREEN!?!? Scared me just as much at 18, as when I saw her in B/W, at six. LOL

  • @donaldscott3921
    @donaldscott3921 5 років тому +1201

    As a former Color photo instructor, I remember being nonplussed when I saw The Aviator for the first time - the color was not right. Then, about 1/3 of the way into the film, it hit me - Scorese and his photo director had purposely shot the parts of the film that were set in the two-color Technicolor era in two-color Technicolor. As soon as the 3-color process era began, the color was "right." Brilliant, understated.

    • @paulbrennan3816
      @paulbrennan3816 3 роки тому +4

      However, the GP thought there was an error as it was not explained, as it should have been.

    • @ldchappell1
      @ldchappell1 3 роки тому +11

      I always wondered why "The Aviator" has that sort of teal colored atmosphere in the beginning. It was really noticeable in that swanky night club scene. It's a great film and it changed my opinion of Leonardo DiCaprio. Thanks for the explanation.

  • @ldchappell1
    @ldchappell1 5 років тому +816

    We were color deprived when we saw "The Wizard Of Oz" on TV in the 60s. We only had a black and white TV. When Dorothy opened the door...alas nothing changed. lol

    • @thetillerwiller4696
      @thetillerwiller4696 3 роки тому +17

      😭

    • @ldchappell1
      @ldchappell1 3 роки тому +51

      @@thetillerwiller4696 If that wasn't bad enough, Judy Garland died a few days after I saw "The Wizard Of Oz" for the first time. 🙁

    • @vixxxenfoxxx3660
      @vixxxenfoxxx3660 2 роки тому +11

      My grandma said her & her sisters would use green and red clear wrap.

    • @xander1052
      @xander1052 2 роки тому +2

      and over here (UK) first viewings of the Wizard of Oz on TV could be on old 405 line systems (though by the 60s we had switched the infrastructure over to 625 line colour ofc)

    • @mduke2k
      @mduke2k 4 місяці тому

      I was born in 1981. I watched Wizard of Oz as a child. I used to think the world used to be black and white before I was born. I didn't know why I believed this until today when I was telling someone about this movie. 😂

  • @RYSEproductions
    @RYSEproductions 7 років тому +712

    Another example of colorists being incredibly underrated. Those looks you talk about weren't just "a click". They were a result of weeks and weeks of a colorist adjusting, correcting, tweaking and masking every single shot, sometimes frame by frame. It's the same level of attention, just a different method.

    • @cats-hv2lm
      @cats-hv2lm 5 років тому +11

      After all, you guys ever use a paint program’s fill tool? It ain’t perfect!

    • @ManiacalBlueberry
      @ManiacalBlueberry 4 роки тому +6

      Honestly just an easier way to say that an IDEA clicked not the effort

    • @kalelmosaiah
      @kalelmosaiah Місяць тому

      @@ManiacalBlueberrywoahh venti pfp haiiii!!

  • @totesmygoats-bq8mk
    @totesmygoats-bq8mk 7 років тому +2421

    When I was a child I thought that the world evolved into color in the fifties and that before it was somehow all black and white. I also thought when you turned off the television the program you were watching would stop and wait right where it was until you got back. Ah childhood.

    • @AlejandraRamirez-bv2ie
      @AlejandraRamirez-bv2ie 7 років тому +115

      d.j Harden that first part about thinking the world used to be black and white, that legit used to be me too lol

    • @SuperSquirtle1
      @SuperSquirtle1 7 років тому +39

      d.j Harden same here! Finally someone who had the same thought

    • @Killinemkid
      @Killinemkid 7 років тому +62

      Barry Celtic OH MY GOD! I was just thinking about that too! Really goes to show how film shapes children's perceptio of the world.

    • @totesmygoats-bq8mk
      @totesmygoats-bq8mk 7 років тому +7

      Alex Davenport that's an excellent point!

    • @UmbaLumba11
      @UmbaLumba11 7 років тому +5

      Barry Celtic, kinda like me too.

  • @Mochrie99
    @Mochrie99 6 років тому +156

    That transition from the sepia to full blown over-the-top Technicolour in The Wizard Of Oz is still one of the most amazing moments in cinema ever.

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh 7 років тому +401

    Something he didn't mention, which is also interesting, is that when "Wizard" was being made, there were only a few Technicolor movie cameras in existence and they were all owned by the Technicolor company. The film studios were only able to rent these cameras, and the Technicolor company required their own technicians to transport the cameras and operate them. Because there weren't many cameras, the movie studios had to arrange to rent them well in advance of when the shooting on a particular film would begin. And every night the Technicolor employees would physically take the camera back to their office to take them apart for servicing and lubrication.

  • @RealEngineering
    @RealEngineering 7 років тому +449

    This was really well explained. Jealous I wasn't the one to cover it!

    • @FireFly-kz2te
      @FireFly-kz2te 3 роки тому +2

      Can you make a video about it?
      (Second comment here)

    • @NiffirgkcaJ
      @NiffirgkcaJ 3 роки тому +1

      Third~

    • @filmishit
      @filmishit 3 роки тому +3

      Silence, verified

    • @FireFly-kz2te
      @FireFly-kz2te 3 роки тому +1

      @@filmishit He's a engineer what do you mean?

    • @it1970
      @it1970 2 роки тому

      do your own version

  • @AwesomeVidzChannel
    @AwesomeVidzChannel 7 років тому +1376

    Yesterday my life was duller. Now everything's Technicolor.

    • @ashleygibson2342
      @ashleygibson2342 6 років тому +31

      AwesomeVidz This is what dreams are made of.

    • @smartalek180
      @smartalek180 5 років тому +8

      You are a poet!
      Did you know it?
      (But it would scan better if it read, "Now everything IS Technicolor," or, "Now everything's IN Technicolor" (take yr pick). Or maybe even, "But now my world's in Technicolor." Or "life." So many choices...)

    • @briankelly9347
      @briankelly9347 5 років тому

      Buy 2 get one free!

    • @YokoshimaSTAR
      @YokoshimaSTAR 5 років тому +8

      More like before life was like it's in technocolour but now it's become duller :)

    • @gabriellelittlefield5956
      @gabriellelittlefield5956 5 років тому +2

      yasssss

  • @tech3431
    @tech3431 7 років тому +236

    One reason Technicolor prints have maintained their vibrancy over decades is because the original negatives are black and white, with the silver halide well preserved, whereas in Eastmancolor the silver halide is completely washed away in developing the negative, leaving only the dyes behind. Over time, the dyes fade and discolor, needed significant digital restoration after being scanned.
    The three strip process was three strips of black and white film with no dyes, just silver halide, so no discoloration. It's why the negatives can be scanned at 4K today and only need a few touch ups for scratches, versus some Eastmancolor prints having to be remastered significantly.

    • @jmowreader9555
      @jmowreader9555 6 років тому +12

      Tech3431, the negatives have nothing to do with the dark storage stability of a Technicolor print. (Also, the Hollywood standard way to archive motion pictures is as separation negatives on black & white film.) The nature of the dyes has everything to do with it.
      Films like Eastmancolor, Ektachrome and Agfacolor use "coupled" dyes. (Kodachrome uses them too, but they're different enough that we won't talk about them here.) The film emulsion contains silver halide grains and part of a dye molecule. The developer solution contains the other part of the molecule. When you develop the film, the silver grain produces a little spurt of a chemical called an "oxidation product" - which is exactly what those two developer parts need to join into a full dye molecule. This dye isn't all that stable; it can fall apart because of excess light, excess heat, excess cold, atmospheric conditions it doesn't like, and sometimes no reason at all.
      The Technicolor process uses 1000-foot strips of film coated with gelatin and a chemical that makes it get hard when it's exposed to light. After the strips are processed - the people who make dye-transfer prints call it "tanning the matrices" - they soak them in aniline dyes, which were used to produce fabrics. These dyes are more stable than the film they're printed on.

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 6 років тому +7

      guys guys. You are both right.

    • @douglassharpe55
      @douglassharpe55 6 років тому +2

      The Dyes were stable.... most Technicolor films do not get reprinted from the YMC's, now the only processing facility is in China. Kodak made the matrices, but no longer... It would be great to make stable legacy prints of say, digital masters.

    • @buddyanddaisy123
      @buddyanddaisy123 5 років тому

      Indeed-colored posters exposed to sunlight often wash out-the red dyes used are not stable-that is why Anco and eastman color films from pre-1960 are washing out. Hope they can be digitally restored, or our grandchildren may never see them in their glory.

    • @jmowreader9555
      @jmowreader9555 5 років тому +3

      @@buddyanddaisy123 There are "light stability" and "dark stability" ratings for anything that's in color.
      Light stability is what you're thinking of. Anything fades in the sun, given enough time, because pigments bleach out under ultraviolet light.
      If you want to learn all about this stuff, download Henry Wilhelm's "The Permanence and Care of Color Photographs: Traditional and Digital Color Prints, Color Negatives, Slides and Motion Pictures" at wilhelm-research.com/book_toc.html. The book is a lot more interesting than it sounds like it would be.

  • @Benjaminaq16
    @Benjaminaq16 7 років тому +5782

    I’m colourblind, so this video was an 11 minute reminder

    • @austindrake2758
      @austindrake2758 7 років тому +80

      What type?

    • @tonedeaf_film
      @tonedeaf_film 7 років тому +8

      Protan for me

    • @eruyommo
      @eruyommo 7 років тому +63

      This comment was meant to prevent people from clicking a link shared by a fake account passing as Vox. By now, it shouldn't be a problem within this video. Anyways, be careful and only click links if shared by the official account of the channel. You can know if an account is official because it has a distinctive margin around its icon.

    • @AlexRolandHuszar
      @AlexRolandHuszar 7 років тому +53

      he means a bot in the chat with the same username and pic but fake, not the video, they are like in every comment section nowadays

    • @hexonxonx
      @hexonxonx 7 років тому +79

      colorblind people can still see color

  • @HansonJ
    @HansonJ 6 років тому +71

    Apparently people complained and got up out of the theatre when it started in black and white. The start really put people off and made them think it was false advertising.

  • @Danyel615
    @Danyel615 7 років тому +36

    Can we take a moment to appreciate how clever artists had to be in order to make ""special effects" in those days? That sepia-into-color trick with the two actresses and a very discreet swap behind the camera is genius!

  • @tommoncrieff1154
    @tommoncrieff1154 4 роки тому +16

    I knew Oz was not the first full length colour film as my Dad always told me the first colour film he saw was the Adventures of Robin Hood and it was a sensation in 1938. When we watched it on TV he also told me Olivia de Havilland was still alive, which to a child of 10 seemed incredible. That was in 1970. I'm 60 now and she's STILL living and it's still a fantastic film, never bettered by any subsequent Robin Hood!

  • @corocorascringechannel6330
    @corocorascringechannel6330 7 років тому +1335

    "So here´s a scene of some Lego people who are apparently... worshipping Lawrence of Arabia"
    I never tought I would hear those words in that very specific order and tone combined.

    • @jacobmartin8332
      @jacobmartin8332 7 років тому +16

      Sire Leumas Clark: The thing I noticed was the fact that it was off-brand Lego.

    • @onerva.
      @onerva. 7 років тому +7

      I laughed at that for a solid 20 second. priceless.

    • @jazmynemapstone8549
      @jazmynemapstone8549 7 років тому

      Ye

    • @kunalcs5079
      @kunalcs5079 6 років тому

      Yes

    • @Trygve84
      @Trygve84 6 років тому +2

      Looks like Duplo, a product of the Lego company.

  • @Siptom369
    @Siptom369 4 роки тому +33

    When you think about the fact that this wasn't even that long ago and now we have those small computers in our hands which can show us this video in almost hd quality is honestly pretty amazing

    • @DeadlyDan
      @DeadlyDan 3 роки тому +1

      Not that impressive really. They were doing this nearly 100 years ago!

  • @Bioniking
    @Bioniking 7 років тому +91

    What's interesting is that back in the day, movies in technicolor would be considered less serious and more fancifu,while black and white was considered the mark of a "realistic/serious" filml. Most musicals and fantasies were filmed in technicolor, while more dramatic films (ie film noir, horror, dramas like On the Waterfront) were in black and white. This changed more or less in the 60s.

    • @amateurbarnaby
      @amateurbarnaby Рік тому +5

      i kind of like how Gone with the Wind which was released the same year as the Wizard of Oz is in technicolor but has serious themes. Kind of sad that no one is talking about the film despite it being such a craze back in the day.

  • @andy.m265
    @andy.m265 5 років тому +2

    I was a cinematographic contact printer at Technicolor London back in the eighties, i swear if i close my eyes i can still remember the “lace up “ path of every single one of the 30 or so different printing machines, that we used . I loved the job and took great pride in telling everybody that I belonged to an exclusive club of only around 80 or so people in England that actually did that job ! Happy memories.

  • @yosiefrezene4141
    @yosiefrezene4141 7 років тому +757

    Here's a question, why is toothpaste mainly mint flavoured?

    • @valerio2259
      @valerio2259 7 років тому +52

      Yosief Rezene it feels fresher?😂

    • @OverUnity7734
      @OverUnity7734 7 років тому +75

      I would guess it is to mask the fluorine that is put in it. Fluorine is best used once a year as an enamel strengthener. When used more than that it causes animals to be come more docile. Very useful if a corporate controlled government were to want to control a populous.

    • @Mikewee777
      @Mikewee777 7 років тому +16

      OverUnity7734 , that explains why I failed boot camp.

    • @OverUnity7734
      @OverUnity7734 7 років тому +13

      Yes, there are many non harmful choices to use in the place of commercial toothpaste . I prefer baking soda mixed with hydrogen peroxide.

    • @SonOfFurzehatt
      @SonOfFurzehatt 6 років тому +107

      Foil hats on, everyone!

  • @PandoraKyss
    @PandoraKyss 6 років тому +15

    Honestly, this makes me want to watch the film 'Pleasantville' again. Seeing how color was used in that movie, it was like seeing colors for the first time. It gave a different level of appreciation, similar to the 'Wizard of OZ' scene.

    • @danjberg
      @danjberg 10 місяців тому +1

      Ha! Watched Pleasantville (again) just the other night. Great movie!

  • @averycomer9229
    @averycomer9229 7 років тому +552

    I can’t tell if this guy is old or young.

    • @mrjbexample
      @mrjbexample 7 років тому +44

      He's 79 according to google. Seriously though, his LinkedIn profile suggests he's 32-34 since he started college in 2002. I think his gray-looking hair makes him much older than his face normally would.

    • @jaredmclaren5571
      @jaredmclaren5571 6 років тому +62

      He's yould

    • @sosidecop64
      @sosidecop64 5 років тому +26

      He is both and neither.

    • @OlviMasta77
      @OlviMasta77 5 років тому +27

      *technicolor intensifies*

    • @OlviMasta77
      @OlviMasta77 5 років тому +9

      He's Schrödinger's Filmhistorian :P

  • @billdirlam744
    @billdirlam744 4 роки тому +7

    Even when the Wizard of Oz was viewed on a B&W TV set you could still be impressed by the look of Oz when Dorothy steps through that door. The Oz art direction and movie sets were amazing. As a kid of the 1960s I didn't get to see the Wizard of Oz in color until around 1965 or so when we got our first color TV. But color TVs of that era weren't really up to the challenge of faithfully reproducing Technicolor movies. One had to wait until Sony made the Trinitron color TV sets of the 1970s to really enjoy color TV programing. Now High Definition television sets just blows me away. Movies I had seen in a top notch theater look better on a modern day Hi-Def TV screen, that's how good the technology has become.

  • @puskajussi37
    @puskajussi37 7 років тому +187

    I think I remember one old finnish grayscale film. There is one scenen where a character steps outside to find that the film is suddenly in full color. He just looks around a bit, shakes his head and heads insede and the film continues in grayscale as nothing had happenend.

    • @VinchVolt
      @VinchVolt 7 років тому +63

      ...why does this sound like something out of a Monty Python sketch.

    • @trailersic
      @trailersic 6 років тому +12

      "We're surrounded by film!"

    • @KrzysiuNet
      @KrzysiuNet 6 років тому +13

      Sounds like psilocibin kicking in.

    • @seeburgm100a
      @seeburgm100a 5 років тому +11

      There were a number of Black and White films through the years that had color segments inserted. The Lon Chaney SR Silent Phantom of the Opera had a color sequence. The Amazing Colossal man had one at the end when the Colossal Man electrified himself at the end. How to Make a Monster also used this technique at the end when the make up artist's house went up in flames.. Many of the Black and white films made during the era when color films could be made were made black and white because of the enormous cost of Color.

    • @OlviMasta77
      @OlviMasta77 5 років тому +5

      That's violently finnish xD

  • @JP_Wu
    @JP_Wu 6 років тому +15

    Wow, "Flowers and Trees" was the first commercial film to be produced in full-color three-strip Technicolor process? I used to watch that film on a videotape when I was little and it was one of my favorites. For so long I was missing it, I think I'm going to watch it again.

  • @stevenbaumann8692
    @stevenbaumann8692 7 років тому +517

    Sweet. Thanks. The uniforms in Star Trek were picked because of the advancement in color. That’s why they didn’t make any sense. They wanted the color to pop.

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen 7 років тому +48

      So that's why the redshirts die, they stick out

    • @stevenbaumann8692
      @stevenbaumann8692 7 років тому +3

      Limey Lassen 😂👍🏻

    • @Novusod
      @Novusod 7 років тому +39

      Red means death and danger. Blame Natalie Kalmus for all the red shirts dying.

    • @gregfeneis609
      @gregfeneis609 7 років тому +33

      If your name was "Ensign Johnson" and you beamed down to a planet before the first commercial break, you're pretty much a goner, no matter what color your uniform.

    • @stevenbaumann8692
      @stevenbaumann8692 7 років тому

      Greg Feneis 😂👍🏻

  • @dingdongism
    @dingdongism 6 років тому +171

    The things that the narrator calls lies are just misunderstandings. I get that it’s a dramatic device but it distracted me a lot for some reason.

    • @Scripture-Man
      @Scripture-Man 4 роки тому +23

      I found the video to be pretentious, including its use of the word "lie". The tone of the video was self-important.

    • @howtubeable
      @howtubeable 4 роки тому +4

      Yes, this is just another example of the Radical Left re-writing history to support its false narratives.

    • @abbyfisher8079
      @abbyfisher8079 4 роки тому +30

      @@howtubeable Wha... how? It was just a pretentious video about colour, and most of the video was correct, just overly dramatic.

    • @KnakuanaRka
      @KnakuanaRka 4 роки тому +6

      Howard Wiggins No, the information was accurate, it was just told in a very self-important manner,

    • @gabrielaviannawerneck7513
      @gabrielaviannawerneck7513 4 роки тому +3

      Howard Wiggins Tf

  • @JustinY.
    @JustinY. 7 років тому +2456

    The world was just in black and white before technicolor was a thing, duh.

    • @schmobot
      @schmobot 7 років тому +162

      Nope, it was sepia. Didn't you watch the video?

    • @alexolas1246
      @alexolas1246 7 років тому +47

      WHO ARE YOU
      WHAT ARE YOU

    • @rrcalidguid2225
      @rrcalidguid2225 7 років тому +8

      LOL. One, the title isn't a question. Two, it's not "what technicolor changed in movies." Using the word how refers to the manner and processes of the evolution and change, not just what is the change from B&W, Sepia. to Colored. And three, producing technicolor moving pictures is a lot complicated beyond the surface value, so learning the history of the technology and the techniques used is quite interesting. That's why stating that "duh" from not colored it turned to colored is an inadequate response imo and seeing a couple comments like yours is also why I felt the urge to create a lengthy reply. Have a good day.

    • @JustinY.
      @JustinY. 7 років тому +26

      It's a joke I'm not serious Enn Spiral

    • @FeyTheBin
      @FeyTheBin 7 років тому +18

      Of course it's a joke, everyone knows the world was a giant book before the invention of television. Check your facts next time.

  • @Aranethon
    @Aranethon 7 років тому +10

    As a Rochesterian I am proud of what Eastman Kodak accomplished, and at the same time saddened by how far it fell. Still neat to see Kodak everywhere. :)

  • @Joe_VanCleave
    @Joe_VanCleave 7 років тому +958

    So now I know where CMYK came from - and why black is "K" (key).

    • @Tmanaz480
      @Tmanaz480 7 років тому +80

      Joe Van Cleave ... Used also in book/magazine printing. The K channel allows text to be printed in a single black ink, rather than a CMY mixture.

    • @JoanaTomlinso
      @JoanaTomlinso 7 років тому +60

      black is K because blue also starts with a B, so hey chose the last letter of black to represent it

    • @MG30001
      @MG30001 7 років тому +2

      How dumb are you? :D CMYK

    • @glossygloss472
      @glossygloss472 7 років тому +78

      Joana Vieira da Silva But they don’t use the word ‘blue’ anyways... they use the term ‘cyan’... so your comment doesn’t make sense.

    • @toogaytofunction3029
      @toogaytofunction3029 7 років тому +16

      CMY is the complimentary colours of RGB, blue has nothing to do with the colours printed, rather, a combination of the first.

  • @Brandonian
    @Brandonian 6 років тому +7

    The wizard of oz is still to this day one amazing film. It’s amazing. Vox also is a amazing channel here on the UA-cams.

  • @24FramesOfNick
    @24FramesOfNick 7 років тому +21

    A Vox style video on movies? I'm all in baby

  • @supercyberfunk
    @supercyberfunk 5 років тому +4

    I can only imagine the awe and wonder that swept over the audiences at the time this movie was released in theaters. I wish I had a time machine to go back and experience other peoples' reactions during that famous scene.

  • @yipperdeyip
    @yipperdeyip 7 років тому +79

    Someone needs to make a playlist full of interesting Vox videos

    • @Dani92670
      @Dani92670 6 років тому +3

      funny. i just found vox videos (in earnest) this very evening and am actually compiling quite a list as i take a breather to type this, as a response to your comment i happened to have just my eyeballs land upon, for whatever random reason! i am an addict to the core and once i find something i like i have to have all of it, or does that make me more of a greedy, insatiable pig than an addict? whatever the case, i am making a list : )

    • @yipperdeyip
      @yipperdeyip 6 років тому +1

      Danielle Marin
      Thank the Gods your eyeballs landed upon my comment! I've saved the playlist you made and it's massive! :D
      Can't wait to watch it, thank youu!
      Ps. We live in a culture where we binge on everything as everything is dopamine filled and bingable pretty much... I even wait for shows I'm interested in to completely finish, so that I can bingewatch it all when I want to (instead of waiting a year for the next season)... 😅
      Maybe we are addicted binge pigs indeed. Oh well...

    • @cattysplat
      @cattysplat 5 років тому +2

      Minus the videos of all the liberal politics of course.

  • @Type3Toys
    @Type3Toys 7 років тому +1

    No joke i literally started writing my paper on how the Wizard of Oz helped change the film industry this morning. Thanks Vox

  • @digitaljefftv
    @digitaljefftv 7 років тому +1000

    Finally something I love. Do more of these.

    • @deeyannie2339
      @deeyannie2339 7 років тому +13

      There's always that one guy.

    • @Rudenbehr
      @Rudenbehr 7 років тому +21

      Cameron Bell “Less politics I don’t agree with”

    • @commentmachine1457
      @commentmachine1457 7 років тому +7

      "finally"?

    • @okidokii85
      @okidokii85 7 років тому +5

      They've made stuff I agree with but Vox is always at its best when it's apolitical

    • @hadriangonzalez607
      @hadriangonzalez607 7 років тому +8

      They always will do whatever they do, they have different people that specialize in different things.. see something u don't agree with, don't click on it.. what is this a dictatorship?

  • @ethanl886
    @ethanl886 7 років тому +45

    when he said “what are all these dust particles” I was about to comment “ASBESTOS, IT’S ASBESTOS”, but then he answered his own question lmao

  • @johnfriscia1731
    @johnfriscia1731 7 років тому +15

    Best Vox video I've seen in a long time. Thanks!

  • @room34
    @room34 3 роки тому +6

    Clever asbestos reference… one of my favorite (but dark) bits of trivia about The Wizard of Oz is that the "snow" was asbestos flakes.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 7 років тому +61

    That was a good one Vox, Thank you

  • @jsfbr
    @jsfbr 7 років тому +2

    Technicolor is EVERYTHING! Those paint-dripping saturated colors of my youth still live in my memories! So gorgeous, and it seems that nothing comes close the 3-wtrip, die-transfer technology, even today. Those red were just amazing!

  • @3p1cand3rs0n
    @3p1cand3rs0n 7 років тому +67

    It also worked wonders on Joseph's Dreamcoat.
    ...I'll see myself out.

    • @3p1cand3rs0n
      @3p1cand3rs0n 7 років тому +1

      @piggyponcho - glad to help, restoring faith in humanity is my specialty!

    • @glossygloss472
      @glossygloss472 7 років тому +3

      Are you talking about the movie, “Joseph, King of Dreams”?

    • @VinchVolt
      @VinchVolt 7 років тому +7

      *+HelloKittyFan 26* It's a reference to an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical called "Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat."

    • @joshuanesbit
      @joshuanesbit 6 років тому

      Phenomenal

    • @HelloKittyFanMan.
      @HelloKittyFanMan. 6 років тому

      Harr... HARRR!

  • @oldschoolel
    @oldschoolel Рік тому +1

    "Is this asbestos?" You know, I asked myself this when I watched that show.
    Always a captivating view into the things of this world - thanks!

  • @Crushenator500
    @Crushenator500 7 років тому +28

    Should have used Suspiria instead of Godfather, it came a few years later and is just gorgeous.

    • @sarpsarp8987
      @sarpsarp8987 2 роки тому

      Inferno (1980) has the smilar look to Suspria (1977), which is the second movie in the series.

  • @mankdeems251
    @mankdeems251 6 років тому +89

    What kind of savage mixes background music over an award winning soundtrack?!

    • @TopCutsAudio
      @TopCutsAudio 4 роки тому +25

      The kind not looking for a copyright strike on their chanel and a video takedown.

  • @collegeman1988
    @collegeman1988 7 років тому +90

    I immediately knew that the statement “The Wizard of Oz is the first feature length film in Technicolor” was wrong. Gone With The Wind was in color and was released in 1938.

    • @Tmanaz480
      @Tmanaz480 7 років тому +8

      collegeman1988 ... Becky Sharp. 1935.

    • @kennethconnally4356
      @kennethconnally4356 7 років тому +13

      Nope, December 1939, months after The Wizard of Oz.

    • @Nuhuhuhuhu
      @Nuhuhuhuhu 7 років тому +19

      Both movies are from 1939, Wizard of Oz is from August 25, and Gone with the Wind is from December 15.
      Ergo the Wizard is the oldest, but actually Becky Sharp was the first color film, but still wrong answer in the context of Technicolor, as there were three strip color layout and not the same technique.
      The novel (Gone with the Wind) is from 1936, and written by Margaret Mitchell.

    • @Nuhuhuhuhu
      @Nuhuhuhuhu 7 років тому +6

      So you immediately thought were a smartass, but in reality you just remembered wrong.

    • @hebneh
      @hebneh 7 років тому +10

      "Becky Sharp" was NOT "the first color film". It was the first FEATURE film in 3-STRIP Technicolor. As this video states, the first 3-strip Technicolor film was "Flowers and Trees", which of course was not a feature. And there had been numerous 2-strip Technicolor feature films before "Becky Sharp".

  • @JessssssssJesssss
    @JessssssssJesssss 6 років тому +12

    And before this,the whole world was colourblind and only saw siepa! Amazing what movies do!

  • @helvera
    @helvera 6 років тому +35

    Technicolors last film suspiria 1977

    • @moon-cf2vw
      @moon-cf2vw 5 років тому +3

      helvetia wild and the colors were so vibrant in that movie

    • @zeneeah
      @zeneeah 9 днів тому

      no it is Pearl 2022

  • @lactyl4890
    @lactyl4890 7 років тому

    Omg finally a channel that actually talks about what the title says. Not some misleading video.

  • @patrickmike2524
    @patrickmike2524 5 років тому +5

    I guess that makes Dorothy going through the doorway the most watched version of the cowboy switch. That’s really flawless.
    I love those in camera tricks that they had to figure out back then

    • @smartalek180
      @smartalek180 5 років тому +1

      I had never heard the term "the cowboy switch" before.
      Thank you for the edumacation.
      [bows in gratitude]

    • @AllanHytowitz
      @AllanHytowitz 4 роки тому

      Watch the video of the "Making of the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy."
      To create the scenes they wanted on their limited 1981 budget they filmed the actors in front of a "green screen" and played that film on an illustrated matte background. It literally was the first commercial TV use of a Green Screen.

  • @natalijaj3309
    @natalijaj3309 6 років тому +2

    Imagine learning things like this in school. I just purely enjoy watching these. So amazing

  • @snowkiss888
    @snowkiss888 7 років тому +17

    Love this. Love knowing more about old films and the technical aspects about them. Does anyone know of such a channel like that? Like Almanac?

    • @ElfriedeRose
      @ElfriedeRose 7 років тому +1

      Ryan Brisentine crash course is doing a series about film production, they did one about film history.

    • @annaclares3318
      @annaclares3318 6 років тому +2

      I will repaste a comment here that I had above... sorry for how long it is lol. Keep in mind that I wrote it to somebody who was talking about how they loved to learn about stuff like this.. Anyways, here it is:
      Hiya! Since you said you love learning about this kind of stuff, might I suggest "The Nerdwriter" and "Every Frame a Painting" to you?
      "Every Frame A Painting" has a ton of videos like this, ranging from everything from director's influence on the "feel" of a film to the unmemorable music of Marvel to the beauty of different cameras. He unfortunately doesn't make videos anymore, but the stuff he did is still amazing and totally relevant to watch.
      "The Nerdwriter" does videos that cover a wide array of topics, but he has some EXCELLENT videos on technical aspects of movies and music and scores in film, and personally, I find him to be even more intriguing than Vox because he usually tries to talk about how choices (like filming in technicolor) impact the theory of film itself.
      I've included some of these men's best works below, but if you truly want to learn about the technical aspects of movies and music, I would recommend both of them over Vox since they don't have a load of distracting edits made to them, nor do they ignore the effects on film that things like Technicolor had/have (not to hate on ya Vox, you're still great in other ways ^_^).
      "Every Frame A Painting"
      Music in Marvel: ua-cam.com/video/7vfqkvwW2fs/v-deo.html
      How to do Visual Comedy: ua-cam.com/video/3FOzD4Sfgag/v-deo.html
      Michael "Bayhem": Layered Visuals in Hollywood Blockbusters ua-cam.com/video/2THVvshvq0Q/v-deo.html
      "The Nerdwriter"
      The Iconic Visuals of Darth Vadar: ua-cam.com/video/y5NhHBjyJe4/v-deo.html
      How Casey Neistat Captures Eyes: ua-cam.com/video/JbiJqTBCQuw/v-deo.html
      Moments v Scenes in Batman v Superman: ua-cam.com/video/38Cy_Qlh7VM/v-deo.html
      These two men completely changed the way I see film, and I think that they will change it for you too. Hope you enjoy! Let me know how you like it :)))

    • @loynjuryllgulpany4778
      @loynjuryllgulpany4778 6 років тому

      Watch RocketJump :)

    • @smartalek180
      @smartalek180 5 років тому

      @@annaclares3318 Thank you so much for those rec's!
      You are a far more reliable curator than the UA-cam algorithms!
      (Tho -- credit where it's due -- those YT algorithms have been getting way better for me lately; they give me something I actually like almost 1% of the time now; an *immense* advance over the previous sad state of affairs.)

  • @aerofpv2109
    @aerofpv2109 5 років тому +1

    One of the best edited informative episodes ever made on UA-cam. We thank you for this masterpiece.

  • @t_mac41603
    @t_mac41603 4 роки тому +6

    Their life in technicolor was so good their feet won't touch the ground

  • @GrahamGibby
    @GrahamGibby 6 років тому

    I really enjoy Phil's style - careful, not fast, and at a conversational volume level.

  • @iamHannahrr
    @iamHannahrr 7 років тому +4

    I love these kind of videos! They are so informative and super duper interesting. Keep it up Vox!

  • @mc7playatease
    @mc7playatease 2 місяці тому

    Well done! My grandfather was one of the Technicolor folks (with his name listed in the opening credits of 136 films from the 1940s and 50s) such as mentioned at 6:21 . My great-grandfather had been one of the early Technicolor investors, staying on through the Depression until a profit came in, and that was how his son got a job there originally, working his way up diligently to become Director at Universal. And it is very true what you said about Mrs. Kalmus 7:52 , who sometimes took the credit for movies she did not touch, without listing those who did. Her daughter was a sweetie!, playing Bonnie Blue Butler in Gone with the Wind, and she was a humble and WITTY non-Hollywood sort. Thank you for your wonderful explanation of the very complicated process used during cinema's Golden Age.

  • @tonedeaf_film
    @tonedeaf_film 7 років тому +43

    Yup. Still colourblind. Why am i watching this?

  • @Dive-Bar-Casanova
    @Dive-Bar-Casanova 6 років тому +1

    I grew up in Hollywood and neighbors were editors and technicians that worked for Tecni color. Incredibly complicated process and amazing they did it, and even more amazing they did it so well.

  • @summerheightshighsecret9936
    @summerheightshighsecret9936 5 років тому +19

    _fun fact about me:_
    _when I was like 6 i once asked my mum_ *_‘back in the olden days, could you only see black and white?’_*
    *i’m **_so_** smart!*

  • @AudieHolland
    @AudieHolland 5 років тому +1

    Even with all the additional information about the famous doorway shot, I think that scene is pure movie magic.

  • @FlOrHM
    @FlOrHM 7 років тому +45

    Why in the 50s there were still films in black and white? was it because technicolor wasn't affordable?

    • @Yzyenthusiast
      @Yzyenthusiast 7 років тому +8

      Flor Rangel Schindler list was released in the 90s in black and white

    • @FlOrHM
      @FlOrHM 7 років тому +29

      Yeah I mean obviously it's for aesthetic and other cinematic porpouses, but if that was a trend back then I guess filiming in color was like a big deal. I read somewhere it was kinda difficult and expensive, that's my question.

    • @nosidezero
      @nosidezero 7 років тому +53

      The process and the cumbersome camera might be the reasons why. Cost as well.

    • @Tmanaz480
      @Tmanaz480 7 років тому +17

      Even though the 3syrip camera was unnessary, Color was still more expensive. Only the "A" pictures got it. Or... Some directors wanted it.

    • @TechnologicallyTechnical
      @TechnologicallyTechnical 7 років тому +26

      Flor Rangel Filming in color was still the more expensive option in the 50's/early 60's

  • @seanodonnell429
    @seanodonnell429 6 років тому +1

    I know we've come a long way since three-strip technicolor, but once I understood the science behind the color absorption and combinations, I couldn't help but think how genius this technology was, especially for the time. I know that the actual process was tedious and time consuming, but the basic concept is so simple and yet so incredibly brilliant.

  • @boogerie
    @boogerie 7 років тому +6

    I'm more impressed with Agfacolor. Munchhausen ten years ahead of Hollywood

  • @purrbox7514
    @purrbox7514 6 років тому

    I love the technicolor look those old movies look so warm and full of character, it's amazing that technicolor still lives on today thanks to filters in apps such as instagram.

  • @SujitKumar-tr1kz
    @SujitKumar-tr1kz 6 років тому +6

    I want this host to be my bed time story teller.

  • @PEN-N-PAL
    @PEN-N-PAL 5 років тому +2

    **Bring back Technicolor, it's the most pleasing movie coloring to ever watch a movie in. Period.**

  • @danidejaneiro8378
    @danidejaneiro8378 7 років тому +75

    There were NOT evil trees in the Wizard of Oz. There were trees who were appropriately miffed at some random entitled white girl who physically assaulted them to satisfy her own urges and who then shamed the victims into complicity. Or something.

    • @Jackson-sr7ms
      @Jackson-sr7ms 6 років тому +7

      Well okay then

    • @JeffDeWitt
      @JeffDeWitt 5 років тому +4

      Well.. the trees weren't evil, they were just grumpy.

    • @allrock1238
      @allrock1238 5 років тому +2

      "Oren Lions on the Wizard Of Oz" (a well respected first nations leader in the haudenosaunee nation) speaks upon some of the understory root angles.. nature was portrayed as the enemy by the writer as well as charters in the story representing figures in our world. have independently confirmed these intensions by the story writer..

    • @marcpeterson1092
      @marcpeterson1092 5 років тому +3

      PC much?

    • @BlaBla-jj6sh
      @BlaBla-jj6sh 5 років тому

      @@marcpeterson1092 Sarcasm.

  • @gniksamkcab
    @gniksamkcab 7 років тому +2

    Really interesting stuff!
    Also If anyone’s confused about the dye process, best to check out Additive and Subtractive systems to understand more about RGB (red, green, blue) and CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, black) and, ultimately, how they complement each other.

  • @katowo6521
    @katowo6521 7 років тому +21

    Ohhhhh I'm a failure because I haven't got a brain

  • @desidudes78
    @desidudes78 5 років тому

    The production quality is just off the charts

  • @mumiemonstret
    @mumiemonstret 6 років тому +5

    Please drop the "Screen blend mode" thing you seem to love that makes all the still images look like my monitor has severe burn-in!
    Extremely disruptive to otherwise excellent content.

  • @markspencer8800
    @markspencer8800 6 років тому +1

    Another aspect that would make Technicolor films more breathtaking to watch would be the fact that they were printed on nitrate stock, which I understand is something to behold. Nitrate stock was discontinued because it was extremely flammable.

    • @nbrewer667
      @nbrewer667 2 роки тому

      As we learned in Tarantino's Inglorious Basterds (and before that, Alfred Hitchcock's Sabotage).

  • @garyking4032
    @garyking4032 7 років тому +17

    I find it interesting that some of those old movies are so saturated, yet the trend for most modern movies is more of a desat look (except anything from Micheal Bay!). Nowadays there's a distinctly different 'video' (saturated, sharp, contrasty) and 'cinematic' look (generally the opposite and with more dynamic range). I wonder how that came about?

    • @lobsterbark
      @lobsterbark 7 років тому +11

      Its probably one of those stupid Hollywood memes. Its such a tiny, insulated community that many ideas stick around for a long time for no reason other than nobody gets exposed to anything different.
      Sorta like the shakey cam effect. Everyone hates it and it only makes sense to contrast against films that don't have it, but its still in basically every movie of the last decade or two.

    • @Axel230
      @Axel230 6 років тому +2

      That's actually because of the switch to digital cameras in place of film.
      The digital cameras capture and output the widest range of shades and colors possible in raw format in order for editors to have more control over the color range of the final product in production.
      Unfortunately, most of the time instead of choosing a more narrow and defined color range they end up just using the raw footage and thus things look grey and murky (Or "gritty"? You know, so people take their job more seriously, after all dark=artsy! Right?).

    • @garyking4032
      @garyking4032 6 років тому +1

      I disagree. Anyone's who's at a high enough level to use raw footage will be grading it, and even if they're not using a specialist grading package, they'll definitely be using one of the standard editors... All of which have simple contrast/saturation sliders along with the more detailed grading tools. I think it's more to do with trying to make things look 'cinematic' - traditionally cinema wasn't particularly sharp, and the use of a projector adversely affected the ability to have high levels of contrast or saturation. The black levels on film were generally higher (because film can fade), and had an organic grain in the shadows. So now everyone's trying to emulate that - just look at work from someone like Philip Bloom - you'll see raised black levels, added grain, a film-like colour space, and often an aspect ratio designed to mimic cinema as opposed to 4:3 or 16:9... After all, a lot of those old films were shot with anamorphic glass, and everyone's trying to recreate those old looks even at the lower budgets (check out Tito Ferrandis youtube stuff and the Amorphot adapters.

    • @whatwedointheshadows3349
      @whatwedointheshadows3349 6 років тому

      what? consumer dslrs shoot in raw.

    • @annaclares3318
      @annaclares3318 6 років тому

      Gary King
      Ah, Michael Bay fascinates me! Here's an interesting video about why his film style is so unique:
      ua-cam.com/video/2THVvshvq0Q/v-deo.html
      It's called "What is 'Bayhem'?" and it talks about how Bay sets up and shoots scenes in such a way that makes them BIGGER and more *dramatized* and whatnot (not to say that I'm a fan of that style, I just find it interesting how it happens).

  • @KRAFTWERK2K6
    @KRAFTWERK2K6 6 років тому +1

    Something that should also be considered is that during the era of shooting films like "Gone with the Wind" or "the Wizard of Oz" the director of cinematography could not look through the camera while shooting. Only prior to shooting, pulling the focus & setting the right f-stop. Once set, they shot blind. That prism reflex viewfinder system only came much later, invented by Arnold & Richter (ARRI) Cine Technik in Germany, with the famous Arriflex system.

  • @zohaibkazi4105
    @zohaibkazi4105 7 років тому +3

    Short summary for those who should probably be studying.
    Movies were not in color before, than they became in color so they look nicer.

    • @Rilumai
      @Rilumai 7 років тому +1

      *"than they became in color so they look nicer."* Are you implying that black and white films don't look nice?? Because they look gorgeous.

  • @mksabourinable
    @mksabourinable 7 років тому

    What I find kinda neat is that a style that's really popular in digital art right now is where you make it look like your piece's colours have been poorly lined up. Like the greens, reds, and/or blues are just slightly off from the main linework/imagery. (Just using red and blue is the most popular, and it's usually just that the dark tones have a slight red shadow on one side, and blue on the other.) This is usually used for dark subject matter, because the piece itself often ends up having high contrasted imagery. This is often evoking the aesthetic of old worn out recordings, especially tv broadcasts.
    I just find that interesting that even in our modern age where clean and accurate colouring is extremely simple and easy, people just _like_ the aesthetic so much that they purposefully go out of their way to make their work look like that.
    (If you want an example of a non-still piece/work that does this, the anime Servamp uses this effect A LOT.)

  • @karinam3475
    @karinam3475 7 років тому +3

    I didn't even watch the video yet and I liked it. 😂 Y'all should make a video about languages

  • @zombiefulci3301
    @zombiefulci3301 Рік тому +2

    All the way back then film was lush and saturated with color but today it's sickly differing shades of grey, looks lifeless and depletes. Oh, and that acrid darkness that it's steeped in is antiseptic

  • @iquemedia
    @iquemedia 7 років тому +505

    It gave movies color, duh

    • @Aaa-ho3sq
      @Aaa-ho3sq 7 років тому +4

      Not only colour, but it gave movies life as well.

    • @rrcalidguid2225
      @rrcalidguid2225 7 років тому +12

      LOL. One, the title isn't a question. Two, it's not "what technicolor changed in movies." Using the word how refers to the manner and processes of the evolution and change, not just what is the change from B&W, Sepia. to Colored. And three, producing technicolor moving pictures is a lot complicated beyond the surface value, so learning the history of the technology and the techniques used is quite interesting. That's why stating that "duh" from not colored it turned to colored is an inadequate response imo and seeing a couple comments like yours is also why I felt the urge to create a lengthy reply. Have a good day.

    • @saarlevy9891
      @saarlevy9891 7 років тому +10

      I think you missed the point of the video, it changed the entire production process.

    • @Aaa-ho3sq
      @Aaa-ho3sq 7 років тому +7

      Enn Spiral, stop trying to be smart or something. The video talks about how technicolour changed movies, simply put, technicolour gave movies colours, that is how movies changed. It doesn't need to be a question. The title doesn't have to refer to the process of technicolour changing movies, it can also refer to how movies were effected by technicolour, in the title it can be translated to "in what way technicolour changed movies'. And also, it was obviously just a joke, this could be inferred by the 'duh', how oversimplified their answer was, etc.

    • @jaycorbin6145
      @jaycorbin6145 6 років тому +1

      Technicolor was the basis of the RGB scale, which is what is used in every color screen even today.

  • @nightfly2893
    @nightfly2893 5 років тому +3

    4:18 These films look like they were made yesterday. Crazy.

  • @stylus59
    @stylus59 7 років тому +52

    I think Walt Disney's Flowers and Trees inspired Cuphead.

    • @shoepixie
      @shoepixie 6 років тому +9

      stylus59 in part, yes! Cuphead was inspired by all the old animations of that period and style.

    • @shrimpbisque
      @shrimpbisque 6 років тому +13

      It got more inspiration from Max Fleischer's stuff, I think. Watch "Swing, You Sinners" and you'll see what I mean.

    • @MattMcIrvin
      @MattMcIrvin 6 років тому +11

      A lot of things inspired Cuphead. It's definitely 1930s style animation.

    • @jaredmclaren5571
      @jaredmclaren5571 6 років тому +1

      Hahaha it made me immediately think of the flower boss from Cuphead as soon as I saw it

    • @KRAFTWERK2K6
      @KRAFTWERK2K6 6 років тому +1

      @ Stylus59: Yes, partially. It was ONE of the animations which inspired the creators of Cuphead. Especially a lot of the 1930s Fleischer Studios cartoons.

  • @pcallas66
    @pcallas66 5 років тому +1

    There was really a lot of thought and time that went into this, but it was definitely worth it. Thank you for sharing.

  • @kennhern
    @kennhern 7 років тому +4

    All I remember about this is watching it with Dark Side of the Moon playing in the background.

    • @bobbyslater1198
      @bobbyslater1198 6 років тому +2

      LOL, we watched it to Jethro Tull's "Think As A Brick".

  • @unclemarksdiyauto
    @unclemarksdiyauto Рік тому

    Very interesting and well thought out video! Thanks for all the hard work!

  • @totaltjefflamorker
    @totaltjefflamorker 7 років тому +17

    Hey, that's duplo

    • @Vox
      @Vox  7 років тому +10

      As I was editing this video, I knew this would come up and I was kicking myself the entire time. Then I quietly wept while playing with my Duplo friends.
      -Phil

    • @driverisaac4806
      @driverisaac4806 7 років тому

      #AFOL #TRIGGERED

    • @AwesomeVidzChannel
      @AwesomeVidzChannel 7 років тому +2

      Duplo is made by LEGO, so it technically is a LEGO man.

  • @blenderfordesigners1312
    @blenderfordesigners1312 7 років тому

    It's amazing how this parallels color printing. I'm surprised they used a Key layer - making it CMYK. Modern color film uses only CMY dyes and while the black K helps in color printing it is mainly used because the majority of printed material has lots of black text.
    Also dye transfer was used to print photos as well. It looks better and doesn't fade as quickly as other color film processes like cibachrome and C-41. You can see it in some museums. They don't make it anymore - it has largely been replaced by high end inkjet printing.
    Fascinating video. Thanks.

  • @sirpsychosussy
    @sirpsychosussy 6 років тому +4

    Do you know, I've never understood why people never like watching a TV show or a film in black and white or sepia. For me, it adds to the film. I think it makes it look a bit more charming.

  • @ZZ-sb8os
    @ZZ-sb8os 7 років тому

    Vox your production values are second to none. Outstanding

  • @sorenkair
    @sorenkair 7 років тому +7

    shoulda mentioned pleasantville.
    god that movie was great.

    • @harrisassment8937
      @harrisassment8937 6 років тому

      Yeah. But it had nothing to do with technicolor...

  • @GamingMuchTerry
    @GamingMuchTerry 6 років тому +1

    Vox really is an amazing channel. You always inform and educate me - even though I was one of the people who knew The Wizard of Oz wasn't the first colour film :) But after seeing this film almost 100 times, I had no idea it hadn't gone from BW film to colour and I'm really glad I learned that today.

  • @Robin_Glader
    @Robin_Glader 6 років тому +3

    I tought 1977's Susperia was the last technicolor film.

    • @CapitainBeefhartfanO
      @CapitainBeefhartfanO 5 років тому +1

      It was, but in America, The Godfather part 2 was their last Technicolor processed movie

  • @myblacklab7
    @myblacklab7 10 місяців тому

    It's amazing that Technicolor still looks better than 1080P digital EVEN WHEN IT IS DISPLAYED IN 1080p.
    Imagine how much better this real film looked when displayed through a real film projector.

  • @wolzie8075
    @wolzie8075 5 років тому +4

    When I said I want a camera I meant I want that beast camera

  • @morganb6717
    @morganb6717 6 років тому +1

    the sepia door scene's use of a body double is obvious in the way in which the door is opened. she opens the door while moving in its outside arc as it swings. this places her outside the frame of the door (and the camerashot) in order to oblige the traffic of something or someone else through its threshhold; it would otherwise be atypical to open a door in this fashion. the appearance of Garland in technicolor begins from the edge of the camerashot's left edge once the frame has realigned to allow none of the sepia set to remain present - good direction disguised as 'film magic'.

  • @wyohman00
    @wyohman00 4 роки тому +4

    This is the first time I've ever heard anybody say, "Sigh-n". I've always heard it as "Sigh-Ann". Anyone?

  • @imsomewhatcertain1024
    @imsomewhatcertain1024 2 роки тому +2

    Even though The Wizard of Oz wasn’t the first colored movie, that scene where Dorothy steps into Oz marked the beginning of a new era in movies.

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 Рік тому +1

      It was the first major production that was on wide scale release.

  • @joelpickard3769
    @joelpickard3769 7 років тому +15

    Really great vid

  • @danjberg
    @danjberg 10 місяців тому

    I have a buddy who worked for Technicolor and the process of color production is amazing. You missed “O Brother Where Art Thou” - color was one of the main actors!

  • @Scripture-Man
    @Scripture-Man 4 роки тому +27

    The video contained some interesting trivia, but I found the editing and delivery somewhat pretentious and self-important.

  • @U2WB
    @U2WB 5 років тому

    It was so obvious to me as a moviegoer when the switch was made away from Technicolor. As a child I used to love going to the movies, to see the vivid, vibrant color. And there used to be Technicolor cartoon features before the movies, too. When the switch was made to Eastman suddenly the movies became dull and lifeless. They’ve never fully regained that excitement for me.