Imperfect Spectrum - A Brief History of Cinecolor (2022)

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  • Опубліковано 26 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 20

  • @peliculasperdidasyencontra5059

    Excellent film about the early days of color cinema. Many of Monogram Studios films utilized this unique process. Thank you for all your hard work in making this film!!!

  • @russarnold8737
    @russarnold8737 Рік тому +3

    Great job, Jack!

  • @etpadgett3266
    @etpadgett3266 Місяць тому

    I hope more CineColor films get released on Blu-Ray!

  • @DaveTexas
    @DaveTexas 29 днів тому

    This is fascinating! I didn’t know much about CineColor, so thanks for making this video. Super CineColor films really do look great. The process was just so complicated, though, and the eventual use of single-film processes made these old multi-film processes unnecessary and more expensive, I suppose.
    I got my undergraduate degree in TV/Film production and went on to get a Master’s degree in photography - all back in the days of film. I learned quite a lot about the invention and early development of color film processes, but I never learned much about CineColor. My film history courses pretty much only talked about Technicolor. It’s so interesting to learn about Technicolor’s competitors.

  • @sf-jim8885
    @sf-jim8885 7 місяців тому +2

    I have several 35mm Cinecolor™ films in my collection. Color has remained reasonably good, considering their age. The main issue I had is that before I acquired them, they had been tightly wound on 2" plastic cores, for probably over 20 years. This made the last 50-100ft of each reel almost impossible to focus, since the inner and outer layers of emulsion had been subjected to a slightly different radius from being stored on the small cores. My solution to the problem was to store them in a "reverse wrap' condition, on the same plastic cores, which reversed the orientation of the 'inner' and 'outer' emulsions. It took about 7 years, but this eventually got the emulsions 'bent' back into registration enough to make the last few minutes of each reel watchable. They are now stored 'tails out' on 4" lab cores, which you can get on special order. The cyan colored sound-tracks do reproduce better on some sound readers than others - - but my experience has been that most of the newer laser diode sound heads handle it well.

  • @hectormanuel8360
    @hectormanuel8360 Рік тому +3

    Great documentary

  • @unigonfilms99
    @unigonfilms99 Рік тому +4

    Some of the clips you showed were amazing! I'd love to see "Prehistoric Women" and "Riders to the Stars" looking as good as they do in these clips on Blu-ray or DVD.

  • @jeffmissinne3866
    @jeffmissinne3866 Рік тому +1

    THIS. IS. JUST. PLAIN. WONDERFUL. THANK YOU!!!

  • @Sludge73
    @Sludge73 Рік тому +1

    Very well put together. Thanks for sharing.

  • @antoniod
    @antoniod Рік тому +2

    Note TOR JOHNSON in "The Lady in the Iron Mask".

  • @emilsuda4101
    @emilsuda4101 Рік тому +1

    Oh Jack! Great documentary on all accounts. Would be great to go back into time and see a actual feature in the theatre in the Cinecolor process. By the way, I do have your JACK AND THE BEANSTALK.

  • @aaendi6661
    @aaendi6661 10 місяців тому

    "Pride of the Blue Grass" was the sequel to "Pride of the Green Sky" in 2-strip Technicolor.

  • @joshgalka9414
    @joshgalka9414 Рік тому +2

    Nice!

  • @PogieJoe
    @PogieJoe Рік тому +1

    Very informative! Thank you!

  • @johnjdevlin2610
    @johnjdevlin2610 Рік тому

    Informative and entertaining. Fantastic! Thanks for the enjoyable walk down memory lane.

  • @jeffkreines2737
    @jeffkreines2737 6 місяців тому

    Loved it. Beautifully explained. More, please!

  • @davidwesley2525
    @davidwesley2525 Місяць тому

    Fun Fact " Poor Cinderella " Starring Cartoon Icon Betty Boop "1934 " Was Betty Boop's Only Color Cartoon Produced by the Fleischer Brothers Max & Dave Produced in Cinecolor.
    😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍

  • @srfurley
    @srfurley 11 місяців тому

    I didn’t know that there had been a three colour version.
    I have handled a few Cinecolor 35 mm and 16 mm prints, and wondered about the soundtrack and how it was able to use a dye image rather than the silver of Technicolor or the dye plus redeveloped silver of Eastmancolor. I read somewhere that the blue/cyan toning was done using an iron compound which absorbed strongly in the infrared, and so could be read with conventional incandescent exciter lamps and infrared sensitive photocells unlike the cyan dye tracks introduced in recent years which required projectors to be converted to red light readers.

  • @spookylemon4947
    @spookylemon4947 Рік тому

    Fabulous