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Topic: Plan 9 From Outer Space ! Outa this world price!
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Osi Osgood
Film God
Posts: 10204
From: Mountian Home, ID.
Registered: Jul 2005
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posted June 01, 2016 12:06 PM
Now, unless there was another print of it that was much better, I believe that this was released by Niles and in they're history of "hit or Miss" prints, this was definitely a MISS, as, it has nearly no grey tones whatsoever and was extremely dupey ...
... but I guess, in a way, that would be appropriate for this particular film, so bad that it's so good!
(Please note, the above statement is about the feature on super 8, not this 200ft digest)
-------------------- "All these moments will be lost in time, just like ... tears, in the rain. "
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Tom Spielman
Master Film Handler
Posts: 339
From: Minneapolis, MN, USA
Registered: Apr 2016
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posted June 10, 2016 10:26 PM
Whether it's film or tape, they'll last several decades if stored under the right conditions. I do agree that film would last longer. I just popped in an old VHS tape from 1992 and it plays perfectly. That's almost 25 years and I haven't done anything special to preserve it. In our old house the basement is always fairly cool, so that helps. I think there is some fear mongering amongst scanning services. Most of them would like you to believe that your films and tapes are months away from being gone forever.
Anyway, VHS is definitely a small screen format which was part of its appeal at the time. It made presentation very convenient and the resolution was adequate for the TVs of the day. And it has its fans and collectors: Is VHS making a comeback?
At this point in my life I don't feel any particular nostalgia for it, but I do remember my college roommates and I scraping some money together so we could order a pizza and rent a movie PLUS the player from the corner video store. Years later I spent many a Friday evening with my young family perusing the new releases at a local Block Buster video. We were happy to transition from VHS to DVD but we've kind of skipped Blu-Ray and mostly stream now. I guess maybe I do feel at least a little nostalgia
I'd be wary of using hard drives for archival purposes. Some of the problems:
1. Magnetic thermal decay of recorded bits and control signals 2. Media corrosion 3. Media lubricant evaporation 4. Fluid dynamic bearing oil evaporation 5. Electronics corrosion and degradation
One organization decided to randomly test a few hard drives that they had sitting round for 10 years or more and about 1/4 wouldn't function at all. Another worked for less than hour. The rest were OK, but take into consideration that older drives were simpler mechanisms that were more reliable than what is being produced today.
While people have been actively converting film to different formats for quite some time in order to preserve it, the film may outlast whatever media they're converting to. Archiving is a tough problem. [ June 11, 2016, 03:50 AM: Message edited by: Tom Spielman ]
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