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35 mm movie film

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This article is primarily about the use of 35 mm film in movies. For more detailed information on its use in still photography, see 135 film.
File:Anamorphic-digital sound.jpg
35 mm film frames. At far left and far right, outside the perforations, is the SDDS soundtrack as an image of a digital signal. Between the perforations is the Dolby Digital soundtrack (note the tiny Dolby "Double D" logo in the center of each area between the perforations). Just inside the perforations, on the left side of the image, is the analog optical soundtrack, encoded using Dolby SR to simulate four tracks. The optical timecode used to synchronize a DTS soundtrack, which sits between the optical soundtrack and the image, is not pictured. Finally, the image here is an anamorphic image used to create a 2.40:1 aspect ratio when projected through an anamorphic lens. Note the thin frame lines of anamorphic prints.

35 mm film is the basic film gauge most commonly used for both still photography and motion pictures, and remains relatively unchanged since its introduction in 1892 by William Dickson and Thomas Edison, using film stock supplied by George Eastman. The photographic film is cut into strips 1 3/8 inches or 35 mm wide — hence the name.[1] The standard negative pulldown is four perforations per frame along both edges, which makes for exactly 16 frames per foot.[2]

A wide variety of largely proprietary gauges were used by the numerous different camera and projection systems independently invented around the late 19th century and early 20th century, ranging from 13 mm to 75 mm.[3] 35 mm was eventually recognized as the international standard gauge in 1909,[4] and has by far remained the dominant film gauge for both image origination and projection. Despite threats both from smaller and larger gauges, and novel formats, its longevity is largely because its size allows for a relatively good tradeoff between the cost of the film stock and the quality of the images captured. Additionally, the ubiquity of 35 mm movie projectors in commercial movie theaters makes it the only motion picture format, film or video, which can be played in almost any cinema in the world.

The gauge is also remarkably versatile in application. Within the past hundred years, it has been modified to include sound, redesigned to create a safer film base, formulated to capture color, accommodated a bevy of widescreen formats, and incorporated digital sound data into nearly all of its non-frame areas. Since the beginning of the 21st century, the manufacturing of 35 mm motion picture film has been a duopoly between Eastman Kodak and Fujifilm.

Early history

In 1880 George Eastman started to manufacture gelatin dry photographic plates in Rochester, New York. Along with W. H. Walker, Eastman invented a holder for a roll of picture-carrying gelatin layer coated paper. Hannibal Goodwin's invention of nitrocellulose film base in 1887 was the first transparent, flexible film;[5] the following year, Emile Reynaud developed the first perforated film stock. Eastman was the first major company, however, to put these components into mass production, when in 1889 Eastman realized that the dry-gelatino-bromide emulsion could be coated onto this clear base and eliminate the paper.[6]

With the advent of flexible film, Thomas Alva Edison quickly set out on his invention, the Kinetoscope, which was first shown at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893. The Kinetoscope was a film loop system intended for one-person viewing.[7] Edison, along with assistant W. K. L. Dickson, followed that up with the Kinetophonograph, which was capable of showing film in rough synchronization with a phonograph record. For both inventions, Eastman manufactured film to Edison's specifications at 35 mm wide. Edison's aperture defined a single frame of film at 4 perforations high.[8] Edison claimed exclusive patent rights to his design of 35 mm motion picture film, with four sprocket holes per frame, forcing his only major filmmaking competitor, American Mutoscope & Biograph, to use a 68 mm film that used friction feed, not sprocket holes, to move the film through the camera. A court judgment in March 1902 invalidated Edison's claim, allowing any producer or distributor to use the Edison 35 mm film design without license. Filmmakers were already doing so in Britain and Europe, where Edison had failed to file patents.[9] A variation developed by the Lumière Brothers used a single circular perforation on each side of the frame towards the middle of the horizontal axis.[10] It was Edison's format, however, that became first the defacto standard, and then in 1909 the "official" standard of the newly formed Motion Picture Patents Company, a trust established by Edison.

The film format was introduced into still photography as early as 1913 (the Tourist Multiple) but first became popular with the launch of the Leica camera, created by Oskar Barnack in 1925.[11]

Amateur interest

The petrochemical and silver compounds necessary for the creation of film stock meant from the start that 35 mm filmmaking was to be an expensive hobby with a high barrier to entry for the public at large. Furthermore, the nitrocellulose film base of all early film stock was dangerous and highly flammable, creating considerable risk for those not accustomed to the precautions necessary in its handling. Birt Acres was the first to attempt an amateur format, creating Birtac in 1898 by slitting the film into 17.5 mm widths. By the early 1920s, several formats had successfully split the amateur market away from 35 mm - namely 28 mm (1912), 9.5 mm (1922), 16 mm (1923), and Pathe Rural, a safety 17.5 mm format (1926). Eastman Kodak's 16 mm format won the amateur market and is still widely in use today, mainly in the Super 16 variation which remains very popular with professional filmmakers. The 16 mm size was specifically chosen to prevent third-party slitting, as it was very easy to create 17.5 mm stock from slitting 35 mm stock in two. It also was the first major format only be released with the non-flammable cellulose diacetate (and later cellulose triacetate) "safety film" base. This amateur market would be further diversified by the introduction of 8 mm film in 1932, intended for amateur filmmaking and "home movies".[12] By law, both 16 mm and 8 mm gauge stock (as well as 35 mm films intended for non-theatrical use) had to be manufactured on safety stock. The effect of these gauges was to essentially make the 35 mm gauge almost the exclusive province of professional filmmakers, a divide which mostly remains to this day.

How film works

Inside the photographic emulsion are millions of light-sensitive silver halide crystals. Each crystal is a compound of silver plus a halogen (such as bromine, iodine or chlorine) held together in a cubical arrangement by electrical attraction. When the crystal is struck with light, free-moving silver ions build up a small collection of uncharged atoms. These small bits of silver - too small to even be visible under a microscope, are the beginning of a latent image. Developing chemicals use the latent image specs to build up density, an accumulation of enough metallic silver to create a visible image.[13]

A short strip of undeveloped 35 mm film.

The emulsion is attached to the film base with a transparent adhesive called the subbing layer. Below the base is an undercoat called the antihalation backing, which usually contains absorber dyes or a thin layer of silver or carbon (called rem-jet on color negative stocks). Without this coating, bright points of light would penetrate the emulsion, reflect off the inner surface of the base, and reexpose the emulsion, creating a halo around these bright areas. The antihalation backing can also serve to reduce static buildup, which was a significant problem with old black and white films. The film, which runs through the camera at 18 inches per second, could build up enough static electricity to actually cause a spark bright enough to expose the film, antihaliation backing solved this problem. Color films have three layers of silver halide emulsions to separately record the red, green and blue information. For every silver halide grain there is a matching color coupler grain. The top layer contains blue-sensitive emulsion, followed by a yellow filter to cancel out blue light - after this comes a green sensitive layer followed by a red sensitive layer.

Just as in black-and-white, the first step in color development converts exposed silver halide grains into metallic silver - except that an equal amount of color dye will be formed as well. The color couplers in the blue-senstitive layer will form yellow dye during processing the green layer will form magenta dye and the red layer will form cyan dye. A bleach step will convert the metallic silver back into silver halide, which is then removed along with the unexposed silver halide in the fixer and wash steps, leaving only color dyes.[14]

In the 1980s Eastman Kodak invented the T-Grain, a synthetically manufactured silver halide grain that had a larger, flat surface area and allowed for greater light sensitivity in a smaller, thinner grain. Thus Kodak was able to break the catch 22 of higher speed (greater light sensitivity - see film speed) means larger grain and more "grainy" images. With T-Grain technology, Kodak refined the grain structure of all their "EXR" line of motion picture film stocks[15] (which was eventually incorporated into their "MAX" still stocks). Fuji films followed suit with their own grain innovation, the tabular grain in their SUFG (Super Unified Fine Grain) SuperF negative stocks, which are made up of thin hexagonal tabular grains.[16]

Other common types of photographic films

In addition to black & white and color negative films, there are black & white and color reversal films, which when developed create a positive ("natural") image that is projectable. There are also films sensitive to non-visible wavelengths of light, such as infrared.

Attributes

Color

Originally film was a strip of cellulose nitrate coated with black-and-white photographic emulsion.[7] Early film pioneers, like D. W. Griffith, color tinted or toned portions of their movies for dramatic impact, and by 1920, 80 to 90 percent of all films were tinted.[17] The first successful natural color process was Britain's Kinemacolor (1908-1914), a two-color additive process that used a rotating disk with red and green filters in front of the camera lens and the projector lens.[18] [19] But any process that photographed and projected the colors sequentially was subject to color "fringing" around moving objects, and a general color flickering.[20]

Color for feature-length films didn't really come into play until the 1920s with Technicolor's two-color subtractive process, invented by Frederic E. Ives and used in 1922 on Toll of the Sea. Using a beam-splitter prism behind the lens, the system exposed two adjacent frames of black and white film simultaneously, one behind a red filter, the other behind a green filter. Every other frame of the negative was copied to two strips of film (called matrices), which were dyed complementary colors, and cemented together base-to-base. The problem-plagued format lagged until 1928, when Technicolor introduced an imbibition process, like lithography, using the two matrices, coated with hardened gelatin in a relief image, thicker where the image was darker, to transfer color dyes onto a third, blank strip of film.

Technicolor re-emerged with a three-color process for cartoons in 1932, and live action in 1934. Using a beam-splitter prism behind the lens, this camera incorporated three individual strips of black and white film, each one behind a filter of one of the primary colors (red, green and blue), allowing the full color spectrum to be recorded.[21] A printing matrix with a hardened gelatin relief image was made from each negative, and the three matrices transferred color dye onto a blank film to create the print.[22]

In 1950 Kodak announced the first Eastman color 35 mm negative film (along with a complementary positive film) that could record all three primary colors on the same strip of film.[23] An improved version in 1952 was quickly adopted by Hollywood, making the use of tri-strip Technicolor cameras and bi-pack cameras (utilized in two-color systems such as Cinecolor) obsolete in color cinematography. This "monopack" structure is made up of three separate emulsion layers, one sensitive to red light, one to green and one to blue.

Safety film

Although Eastman Kodak had first introduced acetate-based film, it was far too brittle and prone to shrinkage, so the very dangerous nitrate-based celluose films, which had to be handled with extreme care or else they were prone to catching fire and exploding, were generally used for motion picture camera and print films. In 1949 Kodak began replacing all of the nitrate-based films with the safer, more robust cellulose triacetate-based "Safety" films. In 1950 the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded Kodak with a Scientific and Technical Academy Award (Oscar) for the safer triacetate stock.[24] By 1952, all camera and projector films were triacetate-based.[12] Most if not all film prints today are made from synthetic polyester safety base (which started replacing Triacetate film for prints starting in the early '90s). However, the downside of polyester film is that it is extremely strong, and in case of a fault, will stretch and not break (causing potential damage to the projector and ruining a fairly large stretch of film - 2-3ft or ~2 sec.), and will melt the frames if exposed to the projector bulb for too long. Original camera negative is still generally made on a triacetate base.

Common formats

See list of film formats for a comprehensive table of known formats

Academy format

In the conventional motion picture format, frames are four perforations tall, with an aspect ratio of about 1.37:1, 22 mm by 16 mm (0.866" x 0.630"). This is a derivation of the aspect ratio and frame size designated by Thomas Edison (24.89 mm by 18.67 mm or .980" by .735") at the dawn of motion pictures, which was an aspect ratio of 1.33:1.[25] The first sound features were released in 1926-1927, and while Warner Bros. was using synchronized phonograph discs, Fox placed the soundtrack in an optical record directly on the film, on a strip between the sprocket holes and the image frame.[26] "Sound-on-film" was soon adopted by the other Hollywood studios. This resulted in an almost square image ratio. To restore a more rectangular image ratio, in 1932 the picture was shrunk slightly vertically (with the line between frames thickened). Hence the frame became 22 mm by 16 mm (.866" by .630") with an aspect ratio of 1.37:1. This became known as the "Academy" ratio, named so after the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[27] Although, since the 1950s the aspect ratio of theatrically released motion picture films has been 1.85:1 (1.66:1 in Europe) or 2.35:1 (2.40:1 after 1970), so the "Academy" ratio was relegated to usage primarily for television. The image area for "TV transmission" is slightly smaller than the full "Academy" ratio at 21 mm by 16 mm (0.816" by 0.612"), which is an aspect ratio of 1.33:1. Hence the "Academy" ratio is often mistakenly referred to as having an aspect ratio of 1.33:1, referring to the TV transmitted area, instead of the actual 1.37:1 ratio of the full "Academy" area.[27]

Widescreen

The commonly used anamorphic widescreen format uses a similar four-perf frame, but an anamorphic lens is used on both the camera and projector to produce a wider image, today with an aspect ratio of about 2.39 (more commonly referred to as 2.40:1. The ratio was 2.35:1 - and is still quite often mistakenly referred to as such - until a SMPTE revision of projection standards in 1970).[28] The image, as recorded on the negative and print, is horizontally compressed (squeezed) by a factor of 2.[29]

File:Film-frames-nba.jpg
A film which has been "hard matted" to 1.85:1 in-camera. Most non-anamorphic widescreen films, however, are "soft matted" by a mask in the movie projector gate.

The unexpected success of the Cinerama widescreen process in 1952 led to a boom in film format innovations from both studios and individuals looking to capitalize on audience demand for higher quality, lower cost widecreen images. Before the end of the year, 20th Century Fox had narrowly "won" a race to obtain anamorphic optics, and began hyping the Cinemascope technology as early as the production phase.[30] Feeling the need to compete but having little time for research and development, the major studios hit upon an easier solution by May 1953: matte the top and bottom of the frame to create a wider aspect ratio. Paramount Studios began this trend with their aspect ratio of 1.66:1, first used in Shane, which was originally shot for Academy ratio.[31] Other studios followed suit with aspect ratios of 1.75:1, 1.85:1 and 2:1. For a time, these various ratios competed, but by 1956, the aspect ratio of 1.85:1 became the "standard" US format. These flat films are photographed with the full Academy frame, but are matted (most often with a mask in the theater projector, not in the camera) to obtain the "wide" aspect ratio. This standard, in some European nations, became 1.66:1 instead of 1.85:1.

By September 1953, 20th Century Fox debuted CinemaScope, the earliest mainstream anamorphic film process to great success.[32] It became the basis for a host of "formats", usually suffixed with -scope, which were otherwise identical in specification, although often inferior in optical quality. (Some developments, such as SuperScope and Techniscope, however, were truly entirely different formats.) Panavision would eventually solve many of the Cinemascope lenses' technical limitations with their own lenses,[29] and Cinemascope became obsolete in 1967 in favor of Panavision and other third-party manufacturers.[33]

The 1950s and 1960s saw many other novel processes such as VistaVision, SuperScope, Technirama, and Techniscope, most of which ultimately became obsolete. Vistavision, however, would be revived decades later by Lucasfilm for special effects work, while a SuperScope variant became the predecessor to the modern Super 35 format popular today.

Super 35

The concept behind Super 35 originated with the Tushinsky Brothers' SuperScope format, particularly the SuperScope 235 specification from 1956. In 1982, Joe Dunton revived the format for Dance Craze, and Technicolor soon marketed it under the name "Super Techniscope" before the industry settled on the name Super 35.[34] The central driving idea behind the process is to return to shooting in the original silent "Edison" 1.33:1 full 4-perf negative area (24.89 mm by 18.67 mm or .980" by .735"), and then crop the frame either from the bottom or the center (like 1.85:1) to create a 2.40:1 aspect ratio (matching that of anamorphic lenses) with an area of 24 mm by 10 mm (.945" by .394"). Although this cropping may seem extreme, by expanding the negative area out perf-to-perf, Super 35 creates a 2.40:1 aspect ratio with an overall negative area of 240 mm2 (9.45"2), only a mere 9 mm2 (.35"2) less than the 1.85:1 crop of the Academy frame (248.81 mm2 or 9.80"2).[35] The cropped frame is then converted at the intermediate stage to a 4-perf anamorphically squeezed print compatible with the anamorphic projection standard. This allows an "anamorphic" frame to be captured with non-anamorphic lenses, which are much more common, less expensive, faster, smaller, and optically superior to equivalent anamorphic lenses.[35] Up to 2000, once the film was photographed in Super 35, an optical printer was used to anamorphose (squeeze) the image. This optical step reduced the overall quality of the image and made Super 35 a controversial subject among cinematographers, many who preferred the higher image quality and frame negative area of anamorphic photography (especially with regard to granularity).[35] With the advent of Digital intermediates (DI) at the beginning of the 21st century, however, Super 35 photography has become even more popular, since the cropping and anamorphosing stages can be done digitally in-computer without creating an additional optical generation with increased grain. As DI becomes less expensive and more popular, it is likely to render Super 35 optical conversions completely obsolete in the near future.

3-Perf

Most motion pictures today are shot and projected using the 4-perforation format, but cropping the top and bottom of the frames for an aspect ratio of 1.85 or 1.66. In television production, where compatibility with an installed base of 35 mm film projectors is unnecessary, a 3-perf format is sometimes used, giving - if used with Super 35 - the 16:9 ratio used by HDTV and reducing film usage by 25 per cent. Because of 3-perf's incompatiblity with standard 4-perf equipment, there generally is no cause for it not be used with the Super 35 mm film camera specification, which utilizes the whole negative area between the perforations, including what would be the soundtrack area in a standard print.[36] Both specifications require optical or digital conversion to standard 4-perf sound prints, and can each easily be transferred to video with little to no difficulty by modern telecine or film scanners. With digital intermediate increasingly becoming a standard process for post-production, 3-perf has become more popular with productions which would otherwise be averse to an optical conversion stage.[37]

VistaVision

A diagram of the VistaVision format, affectionately dubbed "Lazy 8" because it is eight perforations long and runs horizontally (laying down).

The VistaVision motion picture format was created in 1954 by Paramount Pictures in order to create a finer-grained negative and print for flat widescreen films.[38] Similar to still photography, the format uses a camera running 35 mm film horizontally instead of vertically through the camera, with frames that are eight perforations long, resulting in a wider aspect ratio of 1.5:1 and greater detail, as more of the negative area is used per frame.[35] This format is unprojectable in standard theaters and requires an optical step to squeeze the image into the standard 4-perf vertical 35 mm frame.[39]

While the format was dormant by the early 1960s, the camera system was somewhat revived by George Lucas's Industrial Light and Magic starting with Star Wars for visual effects as a means of reducing granularity in the optical printer by having increased original camera negative area at the point of image origination.[40] Its usage has again declined since the dominance of computer-based visual effects, although it still sees very limited utilization.[41]

Perforations

Film perforations were originally round holes cut into the side of the film, but as these perforations were more subject to wear and deformation, the shape was changed to that now called the Bell & Howell (BH) perforation, which has a straight top and bottom edge and outward curving sides. The BH perforation's dimensions are 0.110" (2.79 mm) from the middle of the side curve to opposite top corner by 0.073" (1.85 mm) in height.[42] However, because BH perfs had sharp corners, the repeated use of the film through intermittent movement projectors created strain that could easily tear the perforations. Furthermore, they tended to shrink as the print slowly decayed. Therefore, larger perforations with a rectangular base and rounded corners were introduced by Kodak in 1924 to improve steadiness, registration, durability, and longevity. Known as "Kodak Standard" (KS), they are 0.078" (1.98 mm) high by 0.11" (2.79 mm) wide. Their durability makes KS perfs the ideal choice for intermediate and release prints, as well as original camera negatives which require special use, such as high-speed filming, bluescreen, front projection, rear projection, and matte work. The increased height also meant that the image registration was considerably less accurate than BH perfs, which remained the standard for negatives.[43] These two perforations have remained by far the most commonly-used ones. BH and KS are also are known as N (negative) and P (positive) perforations, respectively. The Bell & Howell perf remains the standard for camera negative films because of its perforation dimensions in comparison to most printers, thus having the ability to keep a steady image compared to other perforations.[44]

The Dubray Howell (DH) perforation was first suggested in 1931 to replace both the BH and KS perfs with a single standard perforation which was a hybrid of the two in shape and size, being like KS a rectangle with rounded corners and a width of 0.11" (2.79 mm), but with BH's height of 0.073" (1.85 mm).[39] This gave it longer projection life but also improved registration. One of its primary applications was usage in Technicolor's dye imbibition printing.[44] It never caught on when Kodak introduced monopack Eastmancolor film in the 1950s,[43] although it persists in certain special application intermediate films to this day.[45]

In 1953, the introduction of CinemaScope required the creation of a different shape of perforation which was nearly square and smaller to provide space for four magnetic sound stripes for stereophonic and surround sound.[7] These perfs are commonly referred to as CinemaScope (CS) or "fox hole" perfs. Their dimensions are 0.073" (1.85 mm) in width by 0.078" (1.98 mm) in height.[42] Due to the size difference, CS perfed film cannot be run through a projector with standard KS sprocket teeth, but KS prints can be run on sprockets with CS teeth. Shrunken film with KS prints that would normally be damaged in a projector with KS sprockets may sometimes be run far more gently through a projector with CS sprockets because of the smaller size of the teeth. Though CS perfs have not been widely used since the late 1950s, Kodak still retains the perfs as a special-order option on at least one type of print stock.[46]

During continuous printing, the raw stock and the negative are placed next to one another around the sprocket wheel of the printer. The negative, which is the closer of the two to the sprocket wheel (thus creating a slightly shorter path), must have a marginally shorter pitch between sprockets. While cellulose nitrate and cellulose diacetate stocks used to shrink during processing slightly enough to have this difference naturally occur, modern safety stocks do not shrink at the same rate, and are therefore negative (or intermediate) stocks are perforated at a pitch of 0.2% shorter than print stock.[42]

New innovations in sound

35mm film audio tracks, from left to right: SDDS, Dolby Digital, analog optical, and DTS time code.

New digital soundtracks introduced since the 1990s include Dolby Digital, which is stored in between the perforations; SDDS, stored in two redundant strips along the outside edges (beyond the perforations), and DTS, where sound data is stored on a separate compact disc synchronized by a timecode track stored on the film just to the right of the analog soundtrack and left of the frame.[47] Because all these soundtrack systems appear on different parts of the film, one movie can contain all of them and be played in the widest possible number of theaters regardless of which sound systems are or are not installed. The optical track technology has changed too; currently all distributors and theaters are in the process of phasing over to cyan-dye optical soundtracks instead of black and white ones (which are less environmentally friendly). This requires installation of a red laser or LED photo-sensor, which is backwards-compatible with older tracks.[48] (The cyan tracks can't be read with older photo-sensors.) Anything Else was the first film only to be released with cyan tracks.[48] The transition is expected to be completed sometime around 2007 and has already happened in most multiplexes.

Technical specifications

Areas on 35 mm film

Technical specifications for 35 mm film are standardized by SMPTE.

  • 16 frames per foot (19 mm per frame)
  • 1000 feet = about 11 minutes at 24 frames per second
  • vertical pulldown
  • 4 perforations per frame (except if using 3-perf for origination)

35 mm spherical[35]

  • 1.37:1 aspect ratio on camera negative; 1.85:1 and 1.66:1 are hard or soft matted over this
  • camera aperture: 0.866 by 0.630 in (22 by 16 mm)
  • projector aperture (full 1.37:1): 0.825 by 0.602 in (21 by 15 mm)
  • projector aperture (1.66:1): 0.825 by 0.497 in (21 by 13 mm)
  • projector aperture (1.85:1): 0.825 by 0.446 in (21 by 11 mm)
  • TV station aperture: 0.816 by 0.612 in (21 by 16 mm)
  • TV transmission: 0.792 by 0.594 in (20 by 15 mm)
  • TV safe action: 0.713 by 0.535 in (18 by 14 mm); corner radii: 0.143 in (3.6 mm)
  • TV safe titles: 0.630 by 0.475 in (16 by 12 mm); corner radii: 0.125 in (3.2 mm)

Super 35 mm film[35]

  • 1.33:1 aspect ratio on camera negative
  • camera aperture: 0.980" by 0.735"
  • picture used (35 mm anamorphic): 0.945" (24.00 mm) by 0.394" (10.00 mm)
  • picture used (70 mm blowup): 0.945" (24.00 mm) by 0.430" (10.92 mm)
  • picture used (35 mm flat 1.85): 0.945" (24.00 mm) by 0.511" (12.97 mm)

35 mm anamorphic[35]

  • 2.39:1 aspect ratio, from a 1.19:1 frame with a 2x horizontal squeeze
  • camera aperture: 0.866" (22.00 mm) by 0.732" (18.59 mm)
  • projector aperture: 0.825" (20.96 mm) by 0.690" (17.53 mm)

See also

Lists

References

  1. ^ 1 3/8 inches is the more accurate description; the film is actually 34.8 mm wide. The size was created by Dickson in collaboration with Eastman, and would have been in standard, not metric, units. An account of this is given in an article by Dickson in a 1933 SMPTE Journal. "Half Frame Cameras". Retrieved August 12, 2006. This size is also exactly half the width of the 2 3/4 inch-wide (69.85 mm) "A-type" rollfilm which was the standard Eastman size at the time. "Enhancing the Illusion: The Process and Origins of Photography", George Eastman House. Retrieved August 12, 2006.
  2. ^ Hummel, Rob (ed). American Cinematographer Manual, 8th edition. ASC Press: Hollywood, 2001.
  3. ^ Horak, Jan-Christopher. UCLA Film and Television Archive, "Introduction to Film Gauges". Retrieved August 11, 2006.
  4. ^ Alsobrook, Russ T. International Cinematographers Guild, "Machines That Made the Movies, Part 1". Retrieved August 11, 2006.
  5. ^ The Wizard of Photography: The Story of George Eastman and How He Transformed Photography Timeline PBS American Experience Online. Retrieved July 5, 2006.
  6. ^ Mees, C. E. Kenneth (1961). From Dry Plates to Ektachrome Film: A Story of Photographic Research. Ziff-Davis Publishing. pp. 15-16.
  7. ^ a b c Kodak Motion Picture Film (H1) (4th ed). Eastman Kodak Company. ISBN 0-87985-477-4
  8. ^ Katz, Ephraim. (1994). The Film Encyclopedia (2nd ed.). HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-273089-4.
  9. ^ Musser, Charles (1994). The Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907. Berkeley, Cal.: Univesrity of California Press. pp. 303–313. ISBN 0-520-08533-7.
  10. ^ Lobban, Grant. "Film Gauges and Soundtracks", BKSTS wall chart (sample frame provided). [Year unknown]
  11. ^ Scheerer, Theo M. (1960). The Leica and the Leica System (3rd ed). Umschau Verlag Frankfurt Am Main. pp. 7-8.
  12. ^ a b Slide, Anthony (1990). The American Film Industry: A Historical Dictionary. Limelight (1st ed). ISBN 0-87910-139-3
  13. ^ Upton, Barbara London with Upton, John (1989). Photography (4th ed). BL Books, Inc./Scott, Foresman and Company. ISBN 0-673-39842-0.
  14. ^ Malkiewicz, Kris and Mullen, M. David ASC (2005) Cinematography (3rd ed). Simon Schuester. pp. 49-50. ISBN 0-7432-6438-X
  15. ^ Probst, Christopher (May 2000). "Taking Stock" Part 2 of 2 American Cinematographer Magazine ASC Press. pp. 110-120
  16. ^ Holben, Jay (April 2000). "Taking Stock" Part 1 of 2 American Cinematographer Magazine ASC Press. pp. 118-130
  17. ^ Koszarski, Richard (1994). An Evening's Entertainment : The Age of the Silent Feature Picture, 1915-1928. University of California Press. p. 127. ISBN 0-520-08535-3.
  18. ^ Robertson, Patrick (2001). Film Facts. New York: Billboard Books. p. 166. ISBN 0-8230-7943-0.
  19. ^ Hart, Martin. (1998) "Kinemacolor: The First Successful Color System" Widescreen Museum. Retrieved July 8, 2006
  20. ^ Hart, Martin (May 20, 2004). "Kinemacolor to Eastmancolor: Faithfully Capturing an Old Technology with a Modern One" Widescren Museum. Retrieved July 8, 2006
  21. ^ Hart, Martin (2003). "The History of Technicolor" Retrieved July 7, 2006
  22. ^ Sipley, Louis Walton. (1951). A Half Century of Color The Macmillan Company, New York.
  23. ^ Kodak | Motion Picture Imaging Chronology of Motion Picture Films Retrieved July 10, 2006.
  24. ^ Internet Movie Database, Academy Awards, USA: 1950.
  25. ^ Belton, John (1992). Widescreen Cinema. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. pp. 17–18. ISBN 0-674-95261-8.
  26. ^ Dibbets, Karel. "The Introduction of Sound". The Oxford History of World Cinema. Oxford University Press: Oxford, 1996.
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