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Vintage Documentary: How Film Is Made

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Yeah, that's a great film. If you read the subtitle credits you'll see they were an APUG related effort. I think it was a Dutch member who first posted it here several years ago.
 
ahhh - yeah.. I'd be kind of surprised if it didn't show up here at some point in the past - but I really wasn't sure how long it'd been on youtube..
 
I don't think it was on Youtube back then. From memory it was hosted on a website and could be downloaded in decent resolution. It'd be nice if some more industrial films like that were to emerge, perhaps from Agfa etc.
 
For those who weren't aware of them, the Video section on APUG has links to a lot of interesting video, including the subject of this thread:

(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
 
From Kodak in 1958. This one's a Dutch translation but has been subtitled back into the original english... pretty interesting...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UJ6w1esVcoY&feature=share

Yeah, that's a great film. If you read the subtitle credits you'll see they were an APUG related effort. I think it was a Dutch member who first posted it here several years ago.

It was me... I made the translation, together with the help of a few others, and did the technical stuff of adding the subtitles to a copy of the original video, as kindly provided by Frank Bruinsma of the Super 8 Reversal Lab. However, the posting on YouTube was done by someone I don't know.

If you want to read a bit about the story behind the found film, you can find it here on my personal website:

http://www.boeringa.demon.nl/menu_technic_kodakfilm.htm

Marco Boeringa
 
AGFA "How film is made"...

I don't think it was on Youtube back then. From memory it was hosted on a website and could be downloaded in decent resolution. It'd be nice if some more industrial films like that were to emerge, perhaps from Agfa etc.

There is one very similar film that is called "Zestig jaar Gevaert: van huisnijverheid tot wereldindustrie" (Gevaert later became Agfa-Gevaert and finally Agfa):

You can watch it here (please let me know if it isn't viewable outside the Netherlands!!!, I possibly have another working link), on a Dutch history TV channel site:

Zestig jaar Gevaert: van huisnijverheid tot wereldindustrie:

http://www.geschiedenis24.nl/speler.program.7082986.html

There has been a previous thread started by me, unfortunately, the link to the other APUG Lounge thread therein is dead, but the thread below contains an English text translation file I created (the original Gevaert video is in Dutch), and that you can download from the thread below:

(there was a url link here which no longer exists)

Marco
 
Marco ,

Thank you for your efforts. I clicked the link in Istanbul and it said I did not install Silverlight . I am using chrome and ie6.

Umut
 
The other link to the Gevaert video

Marco ,

Thank you for your efforts. I clicked the link in Istanbul and it said I did not install Silverlight . I am using chrome and ie6.

Umut

Sorry, Silverlight is an optional module from Microsoft, a bit like Flash I guess... You can download and install it if you run Windows:

http://www.microsoft.com/silverlight/

I guess it is standard part of Windows 7...

Here is the other link to the Gevaert video, where you can watch it in Windows Media, or Real player format:
(Please note this link will resize your browser window to a smaller format to view the video, this is normal, enlarge with the maximize button if needed)
Dead Link Removed

Marco
 
Marco ,

Everything worked flawlessly with your new link and I was able to watch it. At film , color movie excerpts are interesting and an color picture was like black , white and red and slightly brown. No other color was visible. I had been used color AGFA negative film and everything was like light blue , brown and fluorescent red. I think their taste to strong red color separation never changed. Thats why , documentary was very interesting to me.

Thank you Marco and I wish you are fine. I did not see your posts at this summer too frequently.

Best ,
Umut
 
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