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Author
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Topic: Diagonal film scratches
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Randy Stankey
Film God
Posts: 6539
From: Erie, Pennsylvania
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 09-20-2010 06:27 PM
One of most difficult things to trace down are scratches caused by problems in the take-up part of the system.
The damage occurs AFTER the film has played. The film is wound up on the take-up platter or reel but it doesn't manifest itself until the NEXT time the film is shown. By then, it is too late, the damage has already been done.
If you have several people operating the equipment, any one of them could have been responsible. Even if a particular person isn't directly responsible for causing the damage, he could be indirectly responsible because he did not properly monitor the film as it pays out, plays and rewinds throughout the program. If he had been on the ball he might have caught the problem and fixed it before the entire movie was damaged.
It only takes one person to mess things up for everybody. I could come in to work the afternoon shift and misthread the projector just one time and scratch the film all to hell. You come to work on the evening shift and take over for me as I go home. But there lies the scratched film on the platter and you don't even know it. If I'm a part timer or a fill-in, you might not see me again for a week.
Then, on the next round, you play the film that I screwed up. You are the one who gets called on the carpet for the damaged film. You are the one who has to chase down the cause. All because, ONE TIME, I got sloppy.
I'm not yelling at you as much as I am sympathizing with your situation but I am also giving you a little permission to hold your fellow employee's feet to the fire and make them pay attention to their work so this kind of thing doesn't happen again.
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Jonathan Smith
Expert Film Handler
Posts: 201
From: Youngstown, OH
Registered: Jan 2010
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posted 10-09-2010 03:36 PM
I don't know what to say about "soundtrack side" scratches.
I think in terms of emulsion side or base side. Assuming you run soundtrack up, the scratches are probably platter scratches on your print that has the diagonal scratch on the "non-soundtrack side."
I can't explain the soundtrack side. I think, in that case, one of the prior posts would be right.
But, how are you determining "soundtrack side," on screen? Remember the image is flipped horizontally AND vertically during projection.
Emulsion is facing INTO the lamphouse, not towards the lens and screen during projection. This is confusing, because it is the OPPOSITE of a 35mm slide, or a camera original slide or negative. When they contact print film, the emulsion is held in contact to maximize sharpness. So negatives project or print emulsion out, master positive emulsion in, internegative emulsion out, and print emulsion in.
I'm sorry if that is confusing. Dyes that form the negative face out where light is focused on the image; interpositives and prints have dyes facing IN to CONTACT the dyes they are copying during printing (also during projection).
I think you were evaluating prints on the screen (side towards YOU standing on the thread side of the projector in the booth) but that is actually a reversed, upside-down image of the film in the gate.
If you gently hold the edges of the film in the intermittent loop, you can see an upside-down, reversed image I am talking about from between the film and the screen.
Anyway, my own personal experience with this was caused by several prints last year being scratched. No one else gave a shit. I was thinking synch marks (from pulling film tight on a reel) because they are roughly horizontal on sideways-running 35mm STILLS.
So that didn't make sense because they were more vertical, but even there not quite. Diagonal lines aren't synch marks.
Finally, one day, I asked a fellow projectionist at the other IATSE UNION theatres I secretly worked at, who had been doing projection since before my GM at Cinemark was born, about the problem.
He said, "With a strong platter, that is probably platter scratching. The film is being incorrectly threaded back to the takeup [platter film winds back onto after projection] platter."
"No way!" I said, "No one in the booth, besides the managers, would make that mistake."
Well, sure enough, I walked into the booth one day, and Drew, the Usher who had "some projection experience" at his former Cinemakr job with different platters Christie and maybe different projectors had FIVE DIFFERENT PROJECTORS threaded that way. . .
I stopped a lot of movies mid show and ran around the booth to check all thirteen film projectors. After the ensuing panic ended, I did check the final mis-thread, and it actually DIDN'T touch the platter in a way that could scratch the film. My hunch is the tension varies depending on which platter was taking up, how long the movie is, how far into the movie, and maybe how crooked the platter is to cause the film to bow down just enough to scrape against metal.
Am I needlessly plugging the Union? No, I'm not, because my 27 y.o. GM didn't have the funds to PAY anyone more than a quarter above minimum wage. That precludes 20-year veterans with any self-respect from working in a chain theatre environment. Frankly, they didn't deserve my fixing the problem, because, on more than one occasion, said GM said that the scratches were "fine."
So, double check that your film is not "shaving against the grain" (soundtrack facing in the direction platter is spinning to).
Make sure it's always facing INTO the spin.
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