This is topic Creeping Flesh in forum 8mm films for sale/trade/wanted at 8mm Forum.


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Posted by Brian Hendel (Member # 61) on November 27, 2006, 03:41 PM:
 
I thought I'd make another plea here if anyone has the old Derann feature THE CREEPING FLESH for sale. I just lost one on Ebay after searching for years and was devastated. The seller was very vague about whether the color had faded or not, so maybe it's a good thing I lost it. I have to look on the bright side!
 
Posted by Douglas Meltzer (Member # 28) on November 27, 2006, 07:15 PM:
 
Brian,

Lance and I were bidding also and we all lost! The seller's reason for not looking at the film to check for fade seemed like one long dance to avoid having to say yes, the film is red.

Doug
 
Posted by Brian Hendel (Member # 61) on November 27, 2006, 10:26 PM:
 
Doug - I know... who needs another red feature? Anyway, since you brought up the seller's ridiculous dance about the print, I would like to post here his answer to my "Has this print turned red?" question. I don't mean to embarrass him if he's a member here... but THIS IS CRAZY. (Am I bitter about losing the auction? Perhaps...)

Q: Has The Creeping Flesh print faded red?

A: Thank you for your interest. Although I would like to view all my prints again as to color-fade I simply don't have the time and I still have a great Eumig & the outstanding Elmo which allows optical sound prints too to view them on. As far as I know ALL color movie stock at some point will fade; if not now, later. I did in fact pull out more than several feet on a number of reels of various films and found the first few feet method useless. If the film is on multiple reels, you have to view each reel as there may be fade on one and not on another. If the film is mounted on a 1200' reel, you would have to -fast forward- a couple of times past the 400' splice. At one point the airlines used a projection method with super 8mm prints. I have seen some of those and the same thing applies, some reels are faded and some not. Moreover, color or tint to me is a subjective matter. If you went to the theaters 30 or 40 years ago, there was a wide variance in the -tint- of some films. I have seen some postings on eBay that show shots from films that say there is no fade but that to my eye appear to have color-fade. I own an old color feature that is not out on DVD and is not for sale. When I originally got it on 5 400' reels 30 years ago, one of the 5 did not have as strong color as the others which were georgeous. A couple of years ago, I watched it again frustrated it was not out on DVD yet. To my surprise, although not much of one as I knew this would eventualy happen (anyone remember laser-rot? laserdiscs would last forever), one of the 5 had definitely faded. Yet because I enjoyed the film originally I was still able to enjoy it projected much bigger than even a 70' HDTV could offer & with a certain crispness. So I am sorry this does not really answer your questions and I appreciate your interest. Sorry for the longwindedness but to the best of my knowledge ALL color stock film will fade.


HUH!... So the answer to my question is.......it's red, right?!!
 
Posted by Paul Spinks (Member # 573) on November 28, 2006, 08:37 AM:
 
Hi all,
I recently obtained a 4x400ft print of "The Creeping Flesh" on ebay(not the one you were bidding on) and the print is not red. It has absolutely no color left at all and needs a blue filter to give it a sort of bluey monochrome look. So I think you were probably lucky not to have won the auction.I would think that most prints of this title would have faded by now as they were printed on on inferior Eastman stock. [Frown]
 
Posted by Norman Fisher (Member # 481) on November 28, 2006, 08:41 AM:
 
The seller is also selling other color prints and was just as vague on those as well. I too was planning on bidding high for this movie, but when the seller gave us the long winded 'song and dance' I backed out. How much did the print finally go for? I deleted his auction from my watched items before it ended.
 
Posted by Douglas Meltzer (Member # 28) on November 28, 2006, 09:33 AM:
 
The winning bid was $132.50.

Doug
 
Posted by Brian Hendel (Member # 61) on November 28, 2006, 03:26 PM:
 
I am holding out for a good color print of CREEPING FLESH. Not long ago I bought odd reel #2 from Derann's used list and the color was great so there must be good prints around. I can't imagine Derann printed up a random reel of this title recently.
 
Posted by Joe Taffis (Member # 4) on November 28, 2006, 05:57 PM:
 
I won one of this seller's film auctions. I sent him/her an e-mail recommending that they could most likely make more money on their auctions by actually checking the status of the color, and stating whether the color was good or bad in the item description. When I received the film it turned out to be completely RED. I wasn't surprised....I don't think this is a Forum member. I'm glad the 200 footer only cost me $10.00!
 
Posted by Timothy Ramzyk (Member # 718) on December 02, 2006, 02:18 PM:
 
I had a Watlton print of Witchfinder General that was in terrible physical condition but had beautiful clarity and color, then I picked up one from Derann's used list that was pretty brownish (though not described as such) but was in great shape, but I sold both when the British DVD came along (I also have a Sony video projector) So you can still find decent color on some films that you wouldn't think you could.

I do happen to know that the print that still had great color, was also kept in cold-storage and probably not printed on some alternative stock.

As far as that seller goes, I can spot a reddish print with my naked eye, so I don't buy any of that color "philosophy "
 


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