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Topic: Studio movies on 8mm video cassettes
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Winbert Hutahaean
Film God
Posts: 5468
From: Nouméa, New Caledonia
Registered: Jun 2003
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posted December 17, 2009 07:20 PM
Video8 is one of the failure formats from Sony, beside Betamax.
In music industry another Sony's failure is MD (Mini Disc).
In today's computer era, Sony shows its failure in releasing Memory Stick, because people are more comfortable with SD card.
However, those failures are too far to collapse Sony because Sony is too powerful in entertainment industry. In fact, it is even stronger (y buying some Hollywood studios).
The most successful the monopoly format is Play Station (while game console was actually started by ATARI and COMMODORES)
Now, back to Video 8, if you fly in certain flight, they offer to first class passengers a choice of films that we play on Video Walkman, which is actually a stand alone (portable) Video 8.
I believe the name of 8mm was not intended to re-introduce "our" 8mm however just merely based on the wide of the tape. Sony never enter super 8mm market.
cheers
-------------------- Winbert
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Kurt Gardner
Expert Film Handler
Posts: 193
From: San Antonio, TX
Registered: Aug 2005
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posted December 17, 2009 10:48 PM
I immersed myself in the 8mm format when it was introduced. I thought Sony made the best VCRs (from Beta on up) and still do. I was attracted to 8 because at the time the VHS camcorders were huge, even the VHS-C ones, and the 8mm camera could fit in the palm of your hand. I made a lot of tapes in the format and even bought a dual-deck recorder/editor with flying erase head and audio dub.
I bought a digital 8 camcorder six years ago not only to utilize the new technology but also to take advantage of the easy digitization for computer editing. And Joe is right: a big plus is that it's also backwards-compatible so I can digitize my old analog tapes.
As far as the analog video quality goes, I think it's superior to the VHS tapes of the time, probably closer to SuperBeta. Digital 8, when compared to Mini DV, also delivers nice results.
And I gotta say the 8mm tapes are holding up really well; so far I haven't seen any snowflaking as in the old VHS and Beta tapes. However, and to Joe's point again, I tended to buy new tapes every time I went out to shoot video. Ironically, it was because I felt that each tape needed to be new to re-enact the "loading the fresh cartridge into the camera" feeling! Once a filmmaker, always a filmmaker!
Incidentally—and maybe ironically—I used my 8mm camcorder to photograph my super 8 sound home movies to prep them for a compilation DVD. The results were fantastic.
Oh, yeah. The prerecords looked horrible. I had "Watership Down," "Total Recall" and some public domain titles, and they all sucked (although the hi-fi soundtracks were good). They looked like second- or third-generation knockoffs. I think it's because the tape is so small that unless it was recorded on the same equipment, the playhead would just wobble all over the place, looking for a control track.
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Claus Harding
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1149
From: Washington DC
Registered: Oct 2006
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posted December 26, 2009 12:03 PM
When flying some years back, I was used to seeing the Video8mm machines aboard planes, mounted in the galley wall, for feeding the screens in the ceiling. (I always looked to see what they were using... )
I also edited a couple of projects on this format, and it was very delicate stuff, even using industrial gear. Between the inevitable degradation and the tracking/sound issues, it could get frustrating. However, in home camcorders, the format worked well, as these things go. Compact and pretty decent quality.
If you want to talk failure formats, try Beta 1 (Beta 2 was the standard home speed.) Same cassette, twice the speed for industrial purposes. Didn't last long. Of course, then came Betacam (regular, SP and Digi) so Sony 'won' in the end, just in a different market.
Claus
-------------------- "Why are there shots of deserts in a scene that's supposed to take place in Belgium during the winter?" (Review of 'Battle of the Bulge'.)
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