Osi, supposedly filming with a Super 8 camera off a projected image (from a consumer video projector) to get a Super 8 print is nothing new. It is an amateur version of the Kinescope process created in the 1940s to preserve videotaped sources. This, by no means, is comparable with a Super 8 reduction print from a 16mm negative professionally created, even when the said negative is created from a digital source (a DCP or Digital Intermediate). It is an imitation, not the real thing. We must remember too that all, and I mean ALL, commercial features (even those originated on 35mm film) use now a D.I. (for color correction and clean up purposes) since 2007, and the few exceptions are created on professional labs with equipment that is not old and rusty but mostly in very good condition (only a few labs survive and their job is mostly great as it is required by their clients) and that most commercial theaters (with a few, very few exceptions) use DCP (either 2K or 4K, flat or scope) for projection. Even film originated movies are shown using DCPs (being a few 70mm and true IMAX prints exceptions).
Almost everything in life can be debated but I only wish to expose facts, not opinions. Of course this is a free speech forum and I assume that, as in life, not all will agree.
Warm regards to all forum members,
Ruben Torrejon
Almost everything in life can be debated but I only wish to expose facts, not opinions. Of course this is a free speech forum and I assume that, as in life, not all will agree.
Warm regards to all forum members,
Ruben Torrejon
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