[Frameworks] Quo Vadis Celluloid?

Anna Biller pbutterfly at earthlink.net
Mon Aug 22 17:46:12 CDT 2011


The more relevant question would be, how would CAT'S CRADLE look if SHOT on video? It seems clear to me that no such picture could ever be created on video, no many how many filters and special effects and film grain and what-not you added to it. Such a thing would be TECHNICALLY impossible. All of the effects that are achieved belong exclusively to film. Anyone who doubts this need only take a look at the film itself. Anyone who wants to can try to make an argument about how a similar effect could be achieved on video. But as others have pointed out, such effects are not organic to video, so it would be sort of a pointless experiment. When film disappears, images such as the ones we see in that film will also disappear. DIfferent people may have different levels of sadness or indifference or happiness or whatever about that. I personally consider it a HUGE loss. The fact that many or most won't even notice doesn't make it any less of a loss.



On Aug 22, 2011, at 2:37 PM, matt's frameworks address wrote:

> "the difference between 1) watching a Brakhage film shot on regular 8 and projected in regular 8 from a beat-up print in a basement cinemateque, and 2) watching a freshly-struck 70mm print of "The Longest Day" in a 'picture palace' equipped with carbon-arc projection... is greater than the difference between 1) watching a clean 16mm print of "Cat's Cradle" projected on an Eiki SSL-OL and 2) watching a BluRay of "Cat's Cradle" projected on a 3-chip DLP Panasonic at the same image size in the same auditorium."
> 
> i think this is a very strong point, as are others in David's post.  the one thing I believe needs to be interjected, however, is the rapid evolution of the HD technologies, and how vastly it has improved in just the past few years.  the "goats milk vs buttermilk" analogy doesn't hold up because we are comparing two subjects here that are in constant flux.  "car or horse?" is a vastly different conversation today than it was in 1920, and "film or video" is not the same conversation today that it was even ten years ago, let alone what it will be ten years from now.  
> 
> buttermilk will never be goats milk, but buttermilk will surely evolve and improve in the coming years, and may even become preferable to many palates.
> 
> -matt
> 
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