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Topic: Going Dark: The Final Days of Film Projection
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John Hourigan
Master Film Handler
Posts: 301
From: Colorado U.S.A.
Registered: Sep 2003
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posted June 22, 2016 09:58 AM
Many thanks for sharing the video, Janice. This “video about film” made me reflect on my own career in terms of the advance of technology. Thirty-five years ago when I began my career in broadcasting and communications, I was working with reel-to-reel audio tape (editing with a wax pencil and a razor blade), running audio boards, working with film/telecines, and shooting with and schlepping a broadcast camera (with a separate tape deck and battery that felt like both weighed 100 pounds each!). While I wouldn’t trade any of that experience for the world, I don’t immerse myself in longing for a return to those days of yore. And who among us would? – it’s by the very nature of progress that Janice was able to post a link to a video that we were all able to easily access and enjoy. I, too, had to adjust my career in the transition from analog to digital, and I am ever so glad that I did. I’ve had opportunities presented to me in my career that I never would have if I had planted myself in the nostalgia for the past simply for the sake of a format. I’ve found that expanding one’s horizons, while being fully appreciative of the past, yields so much more both personally and professionally. Pining for something that was but will never be again seems to me to be a fruitless way to spend one’s precious but short time on this earth.
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Bill Brandenstein
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1632
From: California
Registered: Aug 2007
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posted September 29, 2016 08:17 PM
Of the various "ode to film" videos that I've seen, this one is my favorite.
You might find it of interest that it was shot at the former Dickinson 10 Theatres, 1901 NW Expressway, Oklahoma City, OK. Built in 1988, originally it was a General Cinema property (Penn Square Mall 8). Today it's renovated and open, now AMC Penn Square 10, and is showing movies digitally. (GCC went bankrupt, of course, then Dickinson got it. Then THEY sold this and many other screens due to bankruptcy proceedings.) See the associated page at Cinematreasures.
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