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Author
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Topic: Silent Film Aspect Ratio
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 05-10-2007 02:33 AM
Given the camera apertures and printing technology in use pre-1930, the variance is purely academic if we're dealing with the silent frame.
quote: Steve Guttag Actually, it would be quite odd if a Nitrate print were casually shipped about...they are pretty well known by those that do these sort of things. Those that handle Nitrate these days are properly equipped (UCLA and Library of Congress come to mind but there are others).
Nitrate elements can't legally be shipped about without going through a lot of formalities. A couple of AMIA conferences ago Rosa Garaisa from UCLA gave a detailed presentation on the packaging and shipping requirements for nitrate in the US. I can't remember the details, though it took her 30-40 Powerpoint slides to fully explain them! If I remember correctly, each state imposes its own health and safety requirements, and if you're shipping the nitrate between states (which of course almost all nitrate shipments are, because most of them are between UCLA, the LoC at Dayton, Ohio, NARA in Washington DC and MoMA in Pennsylvania, which between them account for almost all the nitrate being permanently kept by US archives), the number of boxes needing to be ticked increases significantly.
In Britain, the procedure is that you ring up the courier, tell them the UN materials classification data for nitrate (1324/4.1 if I remember correctly), and then they have a Tex Avery moment when the details come up on their monitor. Then they either refuse to touch the stuff or tell you that it'll cost you serious money.
On the aspect ratio issue, the other thing to bear in mind besides the full-gate plate and lens is that the optical centre of the frame - and thus the alignmnent of the projector - is in a different place with a full width frame. One way of correcting the beam is to use an offset barrel in the lens holder - but if one isn't available, you've got to physically move the projector if you need to get the picture centred on the screen.
quote: Bernie Anderson Jr Once a track was put on the film anything pre Scope or Vistavision was 1.37
Not quite true. For a short period (1928-33 approx.) before the 'Academy ratio' of 1:1.38 was standardised, an optical soundtrack would be superimposed over a full height frame but without any horizontal matte, thereby giving you the 'early sound' ratio of approx. 1:1.19. If the backing lens and anamorph for your 'scope lens are separate units (either screwed together, or with the anamorph on a swing bracket), this ratio can be shown in very nearly the correct size by using your 'scope plate and backing lens, but without the anamorph. Sunrise and M are two examples of well-known early sound ratio films. The Criterion DVD of M preserves the ratio by putting a vertical black matte on the 4:3 video ratio.
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