Talking about digest versions of films on another thread had me thinking about my favorite edited versions, one of which is "Genevieve". The 30 minute Derann edited is actually much more enjoyable than the full film, and tells the whole story with all the best scenes.
But it is one of a few digests from the mid - 1980's that suffer from "The Rank Bubble"!
My understanding is that when Rank Labs were making the 16mm negatives for Derann from edited 35mm prints, they were using wet gate printing and often, due a printer glitch, an air bubble would form in the printer gate. The result was a built-in little bubble shape at the top of the image. Not enough of a distraction to spoil a print, but a slight annoyance non the less, several masters had this little pest present.
It bobs away merrily, albeit faintly, in the top center of affected prints.
I think it was the great Keith Wilton who dubbed it "The Rank Bubble" in his reviews of prints which had this..."the rank bubble appears again...", etc.
Obviously not considered a reject issue (the labs obviously didn't re-make these negatives) several prints of this era would have this, "The Fog" 600 footer being another one.
Anyone else noticed it on prints from that era?
But it is one of a few digests from the mid - 1980's that suffer from "The Rank Bubble"!
My understanding is that when Rank Labs were making the 16mm negatives for Derann from edited 35mm prints, they were using wet gate printing and often, due a printer glitch, an air bubble would form in the printer gate. The result was a built-in little bubble shape at the top of the image. Not enough of a distraction to spoil a print, but a slight annoyance non the less, several masters had this little pest present.
It bobs away merrily, albeit faintly, in the top center of affected prints.
I think it was the great Keith Wilton who dubbed it "The Rank Bubble" in his reviews of prints which had this..."the rank bubble appears again...", etc.
Obviously not considered a reject issue (the labs obviously didn't re-make these negatives) several prints of this era would have this, "The Fog" 600 footer being another one.
Anyone else noticed it on prints from that era?
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