From Kono's website: "... new film... world premiere... brand-new emulsion developed by our professional partner in Germany... "
I see a lot of halation. Perhaps this is the same pre-production run of Optik that doesn't have the anti-halation layer. No idea if this film has the orange base of Optik or the green base of typical Orwo films. I would imagine that Orwo 200 and all its re-brands would be identical, but who knows?
Right now I have too much film at home. I'm going to wait for the version with the anti-halation layer.
I am under the impression that the older version of Orwa 200 was rebranded Konica, there seems to be some frozen rolls left, the new version of Orwo if it is made in German by Orwo and if it lacks a antihalation layer might a repackaged movie film. Kodak Gold 200 is bit cheaper than the new Kino, so movie film or standard daylight,
Orwo is part of the German complex of tiny and mostly 'fabless' (apart from Polaroid) film 'companies' revolving around the phoenix-that-keeps-rising-from-its-ashes InovisCoat and more recently the person of Jake Seal. Coating is done on Monheim on Polaroid's coating line. It's all about as clear as mud and the only thing that's really clear is that we see a variety of new/fresh (so not old, frozen rolls) experimental camera color negative film being marketed. This has been going on for several years now and seems to be a long and slow road towards a mature CN film.