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Topic: Did you ever film material off the television?
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Winbert Hutahaean
Film God
Posts: 5468
From: Nouméa, New Caledonia
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted December 30, 2006 10:34 AM
Richard,
To answer your question, I should admit it that I did!. When it was? 18 years ago? or 8 years ago? no!.... eight months ago. :-)
I was at my second son birth and I did promise in this forum to take the birth as I have done it to my first son. This was during the dateline of pre-paid envelope and I rushed to filming it.
Unfortunately camera did not work well with me and the situation forced me to use a MiniDV as the back-up.
After the birth, since I did not anything to shoot and the dateline for processing was only two weeks to go, then I took a flat TV screen (21 inch) and put the contrast to the highest position (I was hoping to get enough light in compensating K40's low DIN/ASA). I darkened the room and placed the camera as close as possible to the TV screen.
Surely with the MiniDV, I could easily take the important moments to fit the 3 minutes duration.
What was the result?.....
Ok... the flat screen TV with the new technology was hoped to give a better result than the old one. But apparently, it did not do well. the result was still flickery and grainy too.
The highest contrast that I made, did not help much to the picture since the result was still to dark.
I don't know what the result would be if I was using a big LCD/Plasma screen. Would it be flickery and grainy too?
cheers, and happy new year 2007!
-------------------- Winbert
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Jonathan Sanders
Film Handler
Posts: 82
From: Bath, England
Registered: Oct 2005
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posted December 30, 2006 01:47 PM
In 1981 I was making a Super 8 sound anti-war film, based around the reminiscences of an English World War One veteran who had lost an arm. I needed some real and suitably grim WW1 footage to show while he talked on the soundtrack (I did not have lip-sync sound) and I couldn't find any appropriate footage commercially available on Super 8. But then, as now, there were plenty WW1 documentaries on TV, so I filmed quite a lot from the TV and edited the shots as I wanted them, just like any other film.
The main problem was the strobing (rolling bar) effect, which you also see in many theatrical 35mm films that have shots of a TV in use. When you don't see the strobing you know they have faked the TV picture with a special effect of some kind!
I completed the film and still have it, along with a 90 minute audio tape of very frank and sometimes bitter recollections of this World War One veteran, who died some years ago. Now that there are only a handful of British veterans still alive, the film - whatever its shortcomings - seems all the more valuable, at least to me.
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Jonathan Sanders
Film Handler
Posts: 82
From: Bath, England
Registered: Oct 2005
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posted December 31, 2006 06:11 AM
In the 1970s I used to record the soundtracks of televised silent movies like CALIGARI and POTEMKIN, which I owned (or hoped to own) on 8mm, then play the tape while watching the 8mm print. I couldn't afford music-tracked prints at that time, even where available.
In the late 1960s (as a small boy) I also recorded the audio of an entire TV series called GOLDEN SILENTS, introduced by Michael Bentine from London's National Film Theatre. It consisted of short clips from silent comedies, including many rarities that are still difficult to see today (e.g. Harry Langdon's THE SEA SQUAWK). Although I did try to edit together the music for use with 8mm comedies, I also liked to re-hear Bentine's intros (he was quite informative, at least by the standards of the day) and re-run the clips (on which I also made notes) in my mind. That might seem bizarre, even "sad", but it was certainly a good way to become knowledgeable and enthusiastic about silent films!
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