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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Author
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Topic: The Greatest thing ever encountered in the theater business
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Monte L Fullmer
Film God
Posts: 8367
From: Nampa, Idaho, USA
Registered: Nov 2004
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posted 03-04-2005 04:48 AM
Okey, we seen many pages of replies written on the "sickest" thing ever encountered, but now it's time to "swing the pendulum" the other way to what was the Greatest thing ever encountered.
..and I'll start this one off, since this the movie is coming over the horizon come the middle of May:
..and that being "Star Wars"...
Let's go back in time to 1977..when it ALL began:
..in 1977, there were no such thing as the "summer blockbuster" movies.
Sure, two years before, Steven Spielberg scared the willies out of us with "JAWS", which became the first ever "summer blockbuster", but this movie wasn't accepted as such. It was just a coinsidence that this movie did so great at this time of year.
Also, in 1977, when movies came out, there wasn't the thing of 3000 prints being struck and thousands of screens to place these prints. Only hundreds at a time, for studios didn't have the mega million dollar budgets back then as they do now. (we all know the story how FOX put up the money for George Lucas when the other studios turn his "space adventure" down..and the rest is history). They could only afford a million or two here and there. Thus, when movies opened up, the larger towns got them first, then it trickled down to the smaller towns for opening dates. There were no nationwide release dates.
"Star Wars" opened up the third Wednesday of May that year to the large cities. The town, that I was head projectionist at, didn't open up "Star Wars" not until the middle of June. Word was already spreading out how great this movie was, and we just to wait till it was our turn to play this movie.
The day finally came and the few of us wanted to watch this before anybody else. Yet, we weren't allowed to "sneak" this print down until after the release date. I didn't care, for when the "sneak" was to be was the actual release day (only being at 2 in the morning...)
A few friends of mine wanted to see this movie and "okey, we'll do it then."
Well the friends came....and so did 40 other people. The 40 other people LOOKED pretty important - most of them in nice suits and for the women in business dress attire.
I asked my friends on who these people were....SHIT!! they were from the media! They invited the frikken media!
Most of the staff were from ALL of the 3 local television stations, and most of the staff from the local and out of town radio stations that were there that night.
You might say, I suddely got a little "sweaty under the collar."
As we went into the auditorium, I approached them in a professional manner and told them that this sneak was to be kept in a confidential and professional "closed door" manner and that this was an unauthorized showing. I asked them to then please keep this showing within yourselves, for if ever this leaked out to my superiors and to the circuit that I was working for, I'd be facing the "death knell" from HELL for sure.
They all firmly agreed to keep the matter quiet and agreed with what I had asked of them.
So, went upstairs, struck up the carbons, opened up the curtains, hit the lights and we were the first ones in the entire state to see "Star Wars" for the first time...and loved every minute of it.
After this screening, most of the people who were at that "sneak" still came once a week to see this movie, over and over again.
We ran "Star Wars" for six months after that.
I never told my boss that I had that sneak of "Star Wars" and who was all in attendence there until a good 2yrs later when I called him at his new theatre that he was assigned to and told him this complete story.
He had to laugh, for he was actually disappointed that I didn't call him up that night and told him that I was going to run down "Star Wars" for a sneak! He would have been there as well.
I'll never forget this experience that I encounted in this crazy business of being a projectionist.
That was FUN!
-thx Monte
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Frank Angel
Film God
Posts: 5305
From: Brooklyn NY USA
Registered: Dec 1999
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posted 03-04-2005 01:02 PM
My very first epiphany of how incredible it is to make a movie come alive for an audience was actually the very first film I ever ran in our then-newly installed 35mm equipment (all lugged up 5 flights of stairs thru narrow starewells by me an a few stage hands) in our Whitman Theatre. It was 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY -- it was 1970 and I was totally green, but this was the birth of Brooklyn Center Cinema and the 2500 single screen house was full. Mostly young, college students. It wasn't 70mm -- just 35mm, but it was a studio 4trk mag print that was played through that massive sound system, it made the opening Zarathustra opening track with its deep kettledrums and bombastic climax all the more impressive. The audience went wild after the opening, spontaniously clapping. Then when the cut played again during the Dawn of Man sequence ending with prehistoric man Discovering the Tool and tossing the bone, the entire audience lite up matches and cigarette lighters. I looked out the window and saw these 2500 points of light five stories below. What an incredible, mind-blowing rush....and I wasn't even high from the smoke that was wafting up thru the port glass! It was spectacular and I knew there wasn't anything in the universe that I would rather be doing at that moment. This snapped all those brain cell synapses together and they have stay locked that way ever since, and I imagine even till they cart me off to that big change-over movie palace in the sky.
The GM, quite the mood buster, immediately called the booth and said to stop the show. I said, why? Very agitated he said, "Look out the window....they are lighting matches." I said, "Hell yah....ain't it AWESOME?!!" Luckily the sequence is only 2 min or so and they put them out (only to light them at the last real when the Strauss theme plays again).
The second time I got that kind of super thrill was just recently when I was running the summer film festival in Prospect Park. There is an amphi-theatre in front of the stage/screen. It holds about 2000 seats. Behind the booth are grassy hills. I was running CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON in anglyphic 3D (yah, I know, shitty anaglyphic, but that's for another post). The people filed in and filled up the seated area, which was not unusual and I though, hmmmm, really nice crowd. Then the PM called me on the headset and said, "He Frankie, did you look behind the booth?" I lifted the tarp that covers the scaffolding projection/lighting/sound "booths" and looked at the lawn -- there wasn't another spot left for a single other human being to plop a pair of ass cheeks on -- all of them with their 3D glasses already on. We had 6000+ taht night. Now, about the only other place a guy can ply this craft and show a movie to THAT many people would be at Radio City Music Hall, but even there, the projectionist is totally enclosed - he's not right in the MIDDLE of the 6000 people! I got to hear all the ooohs and aaahs and the laughs. Absolutely great.
By this point in time, I have been showing films for some decades, but STILL I get butterflys in my stomach at the very start of the show and then, if the film happens to be one of my favorites, I get goosebumps. Who WOULDN'T love doing this....and getting PAID for it to boot?
And this, boys and girls, is what it looked like -- you are looking at only one HALF of the audience!!
To give you some perspective, you can see just a tad edge of the projection booth just at the top left corner of the picture. [ 03-04-2005, 09:49 PM: Message edited by: Frank Angel ]
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Darren Briggs
Master Film Handler
Posts: 371
From: York, UK
Registered: Dec 2001
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posted 03-06-2005 02:46 AM
My most memorable film presentation i have done was after installing 70mm at the York cinema, the first show we arranged was 'Lawrence of Arabia', we (the projection team) didnt know if it would sell well, but we had done all the promotion possible to get 70mm on the map in york, rehearsed the print at least twice, and then on the morning of the show found out it had sold out and people were leaving there contact details so we could arrange a repeat screening. Then time of the show, starting the run in music, (legs like jelly), then as the Columbia logo appears, opening the masking out to 2.2:1 from 1.33 (We have no tabs) and as the columbia logo faded out, the masking got to full width and the overhead shot of Peter o'toole cleaning his bike appeared, rock solid and crystal clear with a full audience.
Awesum.
All of the 70mm shows we do have the a similar feeling, most recently running Oklahoma in 30fps to a sold out audience was pretty damn cool. Shame the print is a little battered now.
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