Try scanning 5207 processed as ECN-2 one day and you will see why it is a pleasure. It is a wonderful film.
-- Jason
I don't and can't do ECN-2, so such an observation is academic for most of us. And I just rather doubt that it's any different than any other color negative film, to be perfectly honest. There's no technical or logical reason it should be. The rem jet backing? Possibly in a few harsh lighting situations. Possibly.
When I live in LA in the 1980's I did a lot, a lot of film with Identicolor in North Hollywood. Close enough that I usually drove my film in and picked it up. Same business model as the famous/infamous Seattle Film Works, and I think Dale Film in (believe it or not) Hollywood, Florida, they no longer do ECN-2. Around 1993 and around the time I left LA, I discovered RGB Color there. While still doing ECN-2 films, they took the business model and went one very logical step further: Submit your ordinary C-41 film, they would develop and print to slides (Vericolor 5022, IIRC) or GREAT prints since that's what the system was designed for.
Why many companies never did this, I'll never understand, what with the many benefits of shooting color neg. The big negative, if I may, is that without a solid base of technology, prints can come out all over the ball park with consumer level processing. The slide option eliminates that. These days, one's quality home scanner takes the place of making slides or a step towards making prints.
I understand the beauty and intensity of slide film. But it's expensive, exposure has to be spot on and even then can't cover a wide SBR, you only get one output. Converting C-41 into slides is perfect. You get to keep the original, make a lot of copies, make great prints w/o the issues of prints from slides.
In poking around on the intertubes on this topic I came across this outfit:
Dead Link Removed A very fair price per roll to try the Eastman films, and a source of other non-current formats. The Eastman films are available in bulk, too, but essentially at a 4X price penalty over buying from Kodak directly. Well, each to their own. They suggest using
https://www.littlefilmlab.com/services/ for developing the Eastman films, but if you look, it's just C-41 at twice the price to deal with rem jet.
I also found Rocky Mountain Film, only $42.50 to develop one roll of Eastman:
http://www.rockymountainfilm.com/ecn.htm A cursory intertube research didn't find any other per roll Eastman ECN-2 processors.
If there are any real, significant advantages shooting Eastman movie films, over Ektar, Portra, Kodak HD, or Fuji color neg films, I'd be real surprised.