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Author
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Topic: Being billed for replacement reel.
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Jack Ondracek
Film God
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Posts: 2348
From: Port Orchard, WA, USA
Registered: Oct 2002
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posted 11-06-2010 09:03 PM
Just wondering if any of you have run into a situation like this, and if you were able to deal with it (short of writing a check).
This Summer, I got a film with a problem on the last reel. The credits had been spliced in, cutting off part of the ending.
I called for a replacement after running the print one time. We got the new reel & sent the old one back.
Last week, I got a bill for nearly $500, covering the reel and inspection "services". They claim the reel is all scratched up and is not in playable condition. However, there is no mention of the problem I reported in the first place.
Note that this reel went through my machine one time. I'm plattered here, and ran the rest of the print over the next 5 weeks. Apparently, I somehow managed to run everything through OK, only damaging the last reel, and not the reels before, or the whole feature after.
Do the studios have you over a barrel on something like this, or is there some way to protest the issue? In nearly 40 years in the booth, I've never had anything like this happen.
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Brad Miller
Administrator
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Posts: 17775
From: Plano, TX (36.2 miles NW of Rockwall)
Registered: May 99
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posted 11-07-2010 12:00 AM
This is obviously a Technicolor print. They apparently have standing orders to bill for ANYTHING they replace because they believe they are infallible.
Refuse to pay the bill. Stand your ground. Demand for them to re-ship you the reel so you can inspect it. Remember they screwed up, not you.
I have had this happen several times and we have never paid. If in the future one of our guys DOES damage the reel, then fine we will pay it, but when we are building onto platter reels and then laying the entire roll down on the platter, it's pretty darned impossible to damage JUST ONE REEL.
Technicolor does a great job overall, but they completely fail in this department. Their "inspectors" literally have no clue how to handle or inspect film. If the reel makes it to their visual inspection room with the little preview machines, those machines are putting out about 2fl of light. Because of this they can't even see light project-able damage, only the REALLY bad stuff. However most of their "inspections" are glancing under the light and they SERIOUSLY don't know what they are looking for. I've had a reel where the SRD track was printed into the sprocket holes and they claimed there was nothing wrong with the SRD track, but that we scratched it. Not so. Upon getting it back, visually it was flawless...and as odd as this may sound to anyone with a brain...the SRD track was STILL printed into the perforations! Wow, go figure.
Again I cannot stress this enough, they have NO IDEA how to inspect a print there. Same goes for Deluxe.
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Donald Brown
Expert Film Handler
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Posts: 131
From: Lincoln, DE
Registered: Sep 2009
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posted 11-07-2010 05:02 PM
When I was running the Diamond State Drive-In Theatre, I received a number of prints, both from Technicolor and Deluxe, that were not usable, the most notable being "Super Bad" which was coated with very fine grain sand. Through all of the incidents with first run and sub-run prints, I was never presented with a bill for replacement materials or services. This relates to incidents involving the replacement of shipping reels as well. When deficiencies were reported to either Technicolor or Deluxe, I always reported the same to my booking agent, and then relayed the details to a rep' at the respective studio. In the final analysis, if you were not the source of the problem, I wouldn't even consider compensating for the damage. Good luck with this! Don Brown
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