Thanks - that was probably the sort of reference I recalled (partially correctly).
Ahh yeah; that was the thread where I got a bit irritated, shall we say, and shot my mouth off a bit.
Regarding Ektar 25, we (the outfit where I worked) actually did some trials on it at the time. Our main business was high-volume portrait work in a studio chain so "pleasant" skin tone reproduction under professional electronic flash was a major consideration.
Something the company had done perhaps a handful of years prior was to change from 70mm to 35mm film. A change that I was never too happy about on a quality basis. But... it cut film cost roughly in half, and it was, after all, a business. So if we can regain some of that lost detail I, along with the more serious "photo people" in the operation are for it.
We did some side by side tests vs either VPSII or III, whatever was the film of the day. Ektar 25 in our standard long-roll 35mm studio cameras vs long-roll 70mm VPS in a full-70 portrait camera (I'm thinking probably a Nord SLR model). I know I said we had converted to 35mm but we probably still had several hundred 70mm systems in operation; enough to keep a dedicated 70mm cine processor in operation.
So we started with our usual regimen of film tests... latent-image-shift tests to establish a minimum shoot-to-process hold time (you have to know that the color is relatively stable before doing critical color tests). Then some exposure series so we know for sure what is a "normal" exposure.
Finally studio shooting with live models, color targets, and a variety of "standard" colored fabrics. Same scene(s) shot on 35mm Ektar 25 vs full-70mm VPS (II or III). Film processed in tightly controlled machines along with control strips. Then prints are made, professional color papers were all we used. Typically we'd use 8x10" prints for color eval (they're easy to handle); larger prints for further eval. First get best color balance on "normal exposure" VPS (whatever it is), then hand-balance everything else for best match in flesh highlights.
The results... from my fuzzy recollection. First, I was a bit astounded at how much detail the Ektar 25 carried through. As I recall the 35mm Ektar 25 was at least in the same ballpark as the 70mm VPS (whatever it was). But... most likely we shot the Ektar 25 with a couple stops wider lens aperture so this was probably a factor.
But... the skin tone reproduction, as I recall, was fairly miserable. It was bad enough that we would not even consider doing a studio trial. I don't think I was involved in the discussions with Kodak, but my understanding was that this film was never gonna be able to have the skin tone capabilities of VPS. The 70mm VPS printed to 8x10" on a pro paper had just beautiful skin tones.
So... Ektar 25 is something we never pursued farther.