And yet, it was Kodak Alaris who were the main motivators for bringing back Ektachrome (still) film, not Eastman Kodak, who sell the motion picture version.
I'd say that the Ektachrome resurrectors were the Vision 3 people.
They made this camera:
https://www.kodak.com/consumer/products/super8/default.htm
Kodak Vision 3 it's the most powerful imaging system in the world for cinematography, blowing miles away anything digital, but "No Film School" (https://nofilmschool.com/) had remarkable success in helping industry digitalization by teaching technicians, none of those may shadow what spielberg, tarantino, nolan etc do. A single scene shot by Kamiński for spielberg has more excellence than all those "No Film School" technicians will get together in their entire careers, they take a full beating with no bone spared. It is like this... nothing can be done... perhaps things will change in the future but today we have that situation.
But motion film required an school for new young technicians, and that new Super 8 camera was an important tool.
Of course Vision 3 is negative film, so an student would require a complex process to project his shootings, solution was reversal stuff.
What Alaris did to bring back Ektachrome ? Saying that they would distribute it ? It was EK who resurrected the emulsion, and this was a really hard job, KA only distributes it as they have the right to intercept the commercialization of EK still film.
The small sells of motion Super-8 Ektachrome cannot justify making the emulsion, so EK needed the still film market, single problem is Alaris is in the middle taking a share of the profit after doing almost nothing, challenging viability. They distribute EK film because they have the exclusive right, not because they good in marketing.
The Alaris contribution to Ektachrome resurrection is void, the very hard job was made by EK, which after the shrink they still treasure a crop of amazing technicians, those have the merit, IMO.
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