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Topic: 70s Monster Memories -8mm
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Timothy Ramzyk
Expert Film Handler
Posts: 220
From: Milwaukee,WI,USA
Registered: Nov 2006
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posted January 19, 2016 07:19 PM
I had some input in the 8mm section, and provided imagery, so much to my surprise and delight they shipped me the book. Initially the 8mm chapter was to be an article in a issue of Cinema Retro, then they got this book off the ground and included it as a section.
It's a BIG book, so the shipping is rather cost prohibitive, but I know many on this board are in the UK and EU, so it would easier for them to obtain.
Here's link that provides expanded info on the project. http://webelongdead.co.uk/70s-monster-memories-book-available-to-order-now/
By the way, I should say I am in no compensated for the sales of this book, other than the publishers generosity in sending me a copy for my meager contribution.
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Timothy Ramzyk
Expert Film Handler
Posts: 220
From: Milwaukee,WI,USA
Registered: Nov 2006
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posted January 20, 2016 12:40 PM
quote: Its nice to have these nostalgic books out and about but it would be even better if they mentioned many collectors are still bolstering collections today and new 8mm prints are still available such as Ghost of Frankenstein.
I would suppose the onus for that now largely rests on the backs of those carrying the torch, in some ways similar to the way it did with vinyl. Throughout these books it's almost a foregone conclusion that through Ebay and various web entities that there is a secondary market for all things collectible. The issue with 8mm is that it always was (at least in the US) a very niche-market. Everyone had a turntable and records, some had family projectors and home movies, but I anecdotally, I can say I was probably the only kid I knew who had films and my own projector. I'm sure there were more, the library had digests and the Blackhawk collection for loan, and I didn't know all my peers, but there were probably only a handful.
Though this book mentions the progression of 8mm from digest to eventual features, many nostalgia pieces often don't. Probably just due to the the comparatively small numbers in which the were originally produced and released in the hundreds and not the thousands or even tens-of-thousands of more commonplace media.
I remember by the time I got the Dennis Gifford book (early 80s), which has an extensive 8mm index in the back, all I could do was be envious about all the titles that were already no longer available. Some, like WHATEVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?, to this day I've never run across.
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