Kino
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Kodak Color Motion Picture stocks process in ECP and ECN chemistry, not C-41.
Kodak Color Motion Picture stocks process in ECP and ECN chemistry, not C-41.
Absolutely true, but there are a ton of commonalities between these and C-41 in the engineering and technology. One exists because of the other.....however that being said, I don't see C-41 being in danger with every single Wal-Mart having a C-41 type film processing machine still running, and most stores still selling disposable C-41 loaded cameras..worldwide.
I don't think you quite realize how wrong your scenario is. B&W is not even a self-sufficient source of revenue at Kodak right now. C-41 is just barely sustainable. E-6? No.
ECN-2, and even more important ECP-2 print stock you see at the theatre sold *9 billion feet* at Kodak a couple years ago, something like that this year too. I think 6 billion feet of that were print stock. If movies, and especially theatrical projection go digital, C-41 at Kodak is dead, and that is the sad truth of the matter. They'll *maybe* keep Portra around and kill everything else.
I love it when people pump up digital projection that are film fans, not realizing the contradiction. . .
I'm sorry to have to ask this, but you know the above about the products just how?
They are quite different processes and coating formulas just as a Jaguar and a Chevrolet sedan are different.
C-41 exists at the tolerance of motion picture! If MP goes, then C-41 suffers greatly and R&D is trickle down from MP to C-41 products. Right now, there is no driving force whatsoever for E6 products and therefore the technology has not crossed over.
Basically, the Vision film family is the most advanced and technically complex film Kodak makes and it outperforms the comparable Fuji product by a wide margin. The same goes for the print films.
I have had the opportunity to compare all 5 formulas involved, IE, ECN, ECP, Kodacolor, Print film and color paper to comprise the two trains or systems. They each represent quite different products and lines that are optimized for different purposes.
The current comonality is that the starting material is a masked color negative using 2 electron sensitization. Even this was not true 2 years ago or thereabouts. From that point on, the differences proliferate.
PE
try: http://www.prnewswire.co.uk/cgi/news/release?id=146905As far as I am aware, pretty much all commercial cinemas in the UK project from a 35mm film print. And the same is true for most of the world. The fact is that, at present, this is the way movies are distributed, and to change this would require all commercial cinemas to invest in new projection systems, and digital projection systems capable of comparable results are considerably more expensive than their 35mm counterparts. Of course, there is no way the cinemas want to shell this out as at present they don't pay for the film prints.....hence the main reason (other than quality) we still have mechanical projection.
Personally I would argue that it is a good thing it is expensive to release a film, because this way all the rubbish is weeded out. one of the reasons a lot of art-house stuff is called "art-house" is because this is (not all of the time) a euphemism for "poor". If it was good, a studio would snap it up and do the distribution - prime example: El Mariachi by Robert Rodriguez, which he made for $6000 but got distributed by Columbia Pictures - because it is a great film.
Matt
There's just so many problems with that statement, I don't know where to start... and won't.
I'll just say, if you consider current mainstream cinema releases the bell weather of artistic cinema... whew...
At the same time, there is definitely some good in having more than$0 distribution cost.
Do you *really* expect that free cinema won't devolve into something the like's of YouTube?
I mean, sure $2,000 a print or $80,000 for a one-print job is a hell of a lot more than some poor Indy should have to pay, but put in 16mm projectors, 8mm projectors, don't switch everything over to digital than anyone can use.
There's just so many problems with that statement, I don't know where to start... and won't.
I'll just say, if you consider current mainstream cinema releases the bell weather of artistic cinema... whew...
At the same time, there is definitely some good in having more than$0 distribution cost.
Do you *really* expect that free cinema won't devolve into something the like's of YouTube?
I mean, sure $2,000 a print or $80,000 for a one-print job is a hell of a lot more than some poor Indy should have to pay, but put in 16mm projectors, 8mm projectors, don't switch everything over to digital than anyone can use.
you are way out! there around 3,500 in the whole of the UK (Dead Link Removed). The 200 screens mentioned in my original post (clearly this is not all digital screens) would show to 25% of the cinema-going audience.As an example, Odeon alone has around 1100 screens in the UK - then you have all the other chains with similar numbers. I estimate there are probably in the region of 15,000 commercial cinema screens in the UK,
you are way out! there around 3,500 in the whole of the UK (Dead Link Removed). The 200 screens mentioned in my original post (clearly this is not all digital screens) would show to 25% of the cinema-going audience.
Whatever the number of screens the point I was trying to make was that this has nothing to do with mainstream film distribution. It's so some low budget makes can get some audience without having to go through the normal distribution channels. Studio produced films are only released on 35mm print.
However looking at the actual cost, I remember the late John Pytlak from Kodak, who was an expert in all things motion picture, (and had won an oscar on one occasion for some advances in telecine) used to point out on forums such as (there was a url link here which no longer exists) and (there was a url link here which no longer exists) that infact film print distribution and projection is extremely economical - another reason why this is still the mainstram distribution medium.
this was the quote I was responding to above
If your theatre is located in a market the film distributors consider "important" the media for projection is provided to you with no up-front costs except for shipping. But the distributors take 90% of the ticket price for the first few weeks. So, other than the investment in digital equipment, the "cost" of exhibition is going to be the same regardless of whether the film is distributed on digital media or film. The cost of digital exhibition is also financed by the equipment manufacturers, or sometimes just leased to the theatres.
Where individual theatres make their profit is when they get a big hit film that people want to see over and over, as the percentage of the gross demanded by the distributors goes down with every week of play time.
Where individual theatres make their profit is when they get a big hit film that people want to see over and over, as the percentage of the gross demanded by the distributors goes down with every week of play time.
Where individual theaters make their profit is in popcorn. The movies are just a gimmick to get them into the seats.
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