Posts: 815
From: Berlin, Germany, Europe, Earth, Solar System
Registered: Apr 2006
posted June 17, 2010 03:06 AM
Hi,
I do have a Super8-print of "Jungle Book" (the version from 1942 with Sabu as Mowgli). However the colours vary from scene to scene - pretty much like the video-version on www.archive.org. To summarize the problem: It looks like there's no "blue" in the whole film. Therefore I always believed that it was one of the last "two stripe"-Technicolor-movies (Technicolor Process No. 3)... ... however it looks like the Process No. 3 went out of use nearly a decade before "Jungle Book"?! Not to mention that the trailers & excerpts on YouTube show blue clothes and blue skies?
In other words: Is it my print that has faded? Or are these strange colours due to the used "original" or due to the lab? Or is the lack of "blue" really caused by the Process No. 3? (Maybe they've even used both Process No. 3 and Process No. 4 for the film)?
Posts: 815
From: Berlin, Germany, Europe, Earth, Solar System
Registered: Apr 2006
posted June 17, 2010 08:05 AM
quote: if a dupe made the rounds
Due to its age the film is now "public domain" in the USA. And it looks like all (or at least most) DVDs are based on the version that is legally available for free on archive.org...
... BTW: The German DVD is even worse: When the film got released in German cinemas (and hence dubbed in German), this German version fell under German copyright - and hence still isn't "public domain" in this version! As a result the distributor of the German DVD had to take version from archive.org and replace the complete soundtrack! Therefore the German DVD now has got all new voices, new noises ... and Miklós Rózsa's excellent soundtrack got replaced by a cheap synthesiser!
posted June 17, 2010 02:19 PM
Since it was a public domain film, copies were made from prints that had lost their colors or, more probably from eastman prints which had gone reddish.My 8mm copy is reddish. A DVD, newspaper givaway, is reddish. Copies of the film I saw in the cinemas in the 80es and 90es and on TV were reddish. So I guess,unless a proper copy or negative is found and restored,all we will be seeing will be reddish copies !
posted June 17, 2010 07:28 PM
Cant say i,ve seen a redish looking copy in the DVD format,but my cheap DVD showed lots of black and white under the colors,infact,in one of the early shots at the start,the hill above the river is just black and white,it almost looked tinted to me but hasn't been. Im just lucky my full feature on super 8 is B/W,no color fading to put up with.
-------------------- Between Heaven and Hell there will always be Super8
posted June 17, 2010 09:13 PM
Hi Joerg! I have a print with perfect colour in LPP stock,i buy it one year ago from phil sheard (classic home cinema) but what you say is true in one aspect the blues are present but are not as vivid as the rest of colours that looks wondefull,i suspect my print was made from a new negative from 1990 made for tv purposes because the contrast is a very little on the soft side
-------------------- As Steven Spielberg says.... Nothing beats old school projection. Digital is just an imitation.
Posts: 179
From: London England
Registered: May 2007
posted August 14, 2010 02:09 PM
Jungle Book shows fairly frequently on British TV in an official print which has vibrant colours. It was of course British Technicolor and looks beautiful.
-------------------- Always interested in privately produced amateur and home movies.