Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

What 16mm Films Did You See Last Night?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • I don't think Ektachrome sufers like eastmancolor my colour slides and home movies from 1970's are still all good colour.

    Comment


    • On July 1st I had the opportunity to co-host and help project a 12 hour 16mm Marathon to a sold out crowd of 210 audience members! Lisa Wilcox also joined us and introduced her great contribution to a franchise. Please excuse the random order of the photo dump. I’m still trying to figure out how to rearrange photos from my mobile device!

      Attached Files

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Evan Samaras View Post
        On July 1st I had the opportunity to co-host and help project a 12 hour 16mm Marathon to a sold out crowd of 210 audience members! Lisa Wilcox also joined us and introduced her great contribution to a franchise. Please excuse the random order of the photo dump. I’m still trying to figure out how to rearrange photos from my mobile device!
        Click image for larger version

Name:	image.png
Views:	325
Size:	48.4 KB
ID:	83499
        That's a nice large screen! What projector did you use?

        Comment


        • We used Eiki 3500S’s. I also forgot to include the incredible artwork completed by Ciro Nieli!
          Attached Files

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Evan Samaras View Post
            On July 1st I had the opportunity to co-host and help project a 12 hour 16mm Marathon to a sold out crowd of 210 audience members! Lisa Wilcox also joined us and introduced her great contribution to a franchise. Please excuse the random order of the photo dump. I’m still trying to figure out how to rearrange photos from my mobile device!
            That’s looks so good, Evan! So happy you guys had a great showing.

            Comment


            • A digest of The Iron Mask (1929). It's originally a silent film with sound effects and two talking scenes. The version I have has a narration in English, with French and Dutch subtitles (so typically made for the Belgian market). Then, a French musicals reel.

              Comment


              • A classical early French talkie : Sous les toits de Paris, Under The Roofs Of Paris (1930) from René Clair. In France, talkies started only in 1929 (and that year, most of the films released were still silent). René Clair's film (his first talkie) has taste of silent film : several dialogues are silent (people away from the camera or behind a glass). It looks even that some scenes were not shot at 24 fps. My copy has English subtitles but they are at a minimum (several dialogues are not "translated", nor are the songs), I'm not sure I would be completely satisfayed with them if I could not understand French, but it seems that the fact that they are few dialogues in the film helped it to be exported in its time. Albert Préjean, who plays the main male role, started with silent films. He was a big star in the '30s. During the war, he visited Germany, something he was blamed for at the end of the war and he never got his high popularity back after that. He played in a 1921 silent film titled "Les trois mousquetaires" (as you guessed, The Three Musketeers). That film was sonorized for a TV channel in the '90s (if I'm not mistaking) for a TV channel. His son, Patrick Préjean, an artist as well, made the narration. I was lucky to see that film in a cinema in Paris for an avant-première and Patrick Préjean was there. He said that he had been very happy to do this narration because that gave him the unique opportunity to have his name credited in a film his father played in.

                Click image for larger version

Name:	20230808_234807.jpg
Views:	309
Size:	124.1 KB
ID:	85094 Click image for larger version

Name:	20230808_234838.jpg
Views:	298
Size:	55.0 KB
ID:	85095 Albert Préjean.

                Comment


                • Dominique,

                  At first I confused this with a later Clair film, "The Gates of Paris". I'll have to see this one.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Douglas Meltzer View Post
                    Dominique,

                    At first I confused this with a later Clair film, "The Gates of Paris". I'll have to see this one.
                    Is it "Porte des Lilas", Doug ?

                    Comment


                    • Dominique,

                      Yes, from 1957. A great performance by Pierre Brasseur.

                      Comment


                      • Douglas, and the only film with Georges Brassens as actor. Probably complely unlnown outside the French-speaking world, Georges Brassens is regarded as one of the (if not the) best ",text songs" singer. The quality of the lyrics of his songs is unquestionned.

                        Comment


                        • This was the only brand new 16mm print of "Pieces Of Silver" I bought many moons ago, screened it again two nights ago
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1030676.jpg
Views:	270
Size:	140.8 KB
ID:	85504
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1340043.jpg
Views:	270
Size:	172.8 KB
ID:	85505
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1340053.jpg
Views:	266
Size:	82.4 KB
ID:	85506
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1340104.jpg
Views:	266
Size:	79.1 KB
ID:	85507
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1340115.jpg
Views:	263
Size:	54.1 KB
ID:	85508
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1340120.jpg
Views:	262
Size:	80.3 KB
ID:	85509
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1340078.jpg
Views:	271
Size:	85.7 KB
ID:	85510
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1340061.jpg
Views:	261
Size:	84.4 KB
ID:	85511
                          Click image for larger version

Name:	P1340122.jpg
Views:	257
Size:	87.8 KB
ID:	85512

                          Comment


                          • mischief managed!
                            Attached Files

                            Comment


                            • Sleepless in Seattle
                              Attached Files

                              Comment


                              • Tonight it was one of three recent purchases I have made. You will find out about the other two in due course.

                                But tonight was Hitchcock night with The Man Who Knew Too Much on 2x 2200 spools. It was a black and white copy but seem to think it was shot in color. It is also a film I had never seen before so was extra special seeing it on 16mm on the big screen up in the man cave ! Not a bad copy. An obviously "used" copy with sporadic faint lines here and there but nothing serious.
                                ...... Oh.... and I never spotted him ! Had to refer to Google later !

                                .

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X