Posts: 1375
From: Washington, DC
Registered: Jul 2003
posted September 10, 2004 07:22 AM
Who was the "KEN" of Ken Films? Was that the company owner's real name, or did stand for something else? Is there a last name? Is he still in the New Jersey area today???
Who is Ken?
Just thought I'd throw that out there this morning.
posted September 11, 2004 01:04 PM
I believe a gentleman named Bob Lane was the owner of Ken Films if I'm not mistaken. However, I, too, always wondered where the "Ken" of Ken Films originated.
Posts: 902
From: New York, New York
Registered: Jun 2003
posted September 12, 2004 07:43 PM
Since people are interested in Ken Films... I was driving through Fort Lee, New Jersey not too long ago and I remembered the Main Street address that Ken Films had printed on the back of their boxes back in the 70's... so, out of curiosity, I drove by the old home of Ken Films and it is now a Middle Eastern home furniture/goods store. I'm not sure if it's even the same building but it's at the end of the busiest street in town right before it turns residential. I couldn't help but fantasize about being there thirty years ago with a warehouse full of super 8 prints! I thought you other 8mm fanatics would get a kick out of knowing that...
Posts: 1375
From: Washington, DC
Registered: Jul 2003
posted September 14, 2004 06:04 PM
Thanks for the info guys!
Brian- That's really cool. I wish I had been old enough to drive back in '78 - I would have been all over the place checking out the super 8 companies.
I almost visited Red Fox Films in Pennsylvania in the late 80's, since they were only about 3 hours from my house. I kept putting it off, and suddenly they were gone too
Posts: 1171
From: Highland Mills, NY USA
Registered: Jun 2003
posted September 15, 2004 12:37 AM
I actually visited SELECT FILM LIBRARY in Manhattan years ago. My parents took the family to NYC for a winter vacation back in '76 and I remember how disappointed I was to find that it wasn't a "library" of any sorts, but merely a small office in some old building with some old "crones" sitting at their desks answering phones and doing typical office type duties and not hospitable at all to wide-eyed kids like myself who had delusions of grandeur of what a Super-8 company should look like. I was so let down I vowed I never wanted to see any others fearing they would all be the same way. Not big industry companies with a vast museum of films, on site, ready to sell to the collector - but, merely, a P.O. Box in some drab office building that phoned customer orders into a warehouse somewhere from which these orders were then picked & packed (Snore).