I remember seeing information years ago about a video system that allowed a theatre to project big ticket "live" events like sports events and such via video transmission. It used a very ingenus (although massive) system that started with a basic TV receiver and a 35mm film camera. The camera would film the TV tube raster (same basic system as a kinescope), then the exposed film would pass thru a developing/washing/fixative/drying processing of some kind or perhaps some kind of modified Polaroid Land process. Then the finished film would emerge to pass thru a standard 35mm projector head/lamphouse and onto the theatre screen. The system boast of being able to produce a theatre sized image with the same brightness/contrast and large screen as a standard movie; while it did not produce instantaneous reproduction in terms of it being called a "live" event, it was pretty close given the logistics. While this seems like a really elaborate and expensive contraption, the end product at the time (displaying video on a theatre size screen) was more successful than the other attempts of the day to do the same using strictly video systems. All though I do remember one system called the Edophor(?) that somehow used an oil film to modulate an image that could then be lit and focused on a screen, it didn't have the brightness or resolution to produce theatre screen size images.
Does anyone have any information about this video-to-film-to-screen system or even what it was called?
Does anyone have any information about this video-to-film-to-screen system or even what it was called?
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