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Did you know
- TriviaThe first commercially-produced film shot under the Kinemacolor brand 2-color process.
Featured review
People are amazed that color movies were produced so early in the beginning years of cinema. The first successful color film system was rolled out in Dec. 1908 with "A Visit To The Seaside." Refined by England's George Smith, who teamed up with U.S. expat Charles Urban, the two came out with a two-color system (green and red), which consisted of a transparent spinning disc in front of the camera lens. Speeding up the camera to 32 frames per second, the innovators achieved a reasonable degree of success in capturing color on the basic black and white film stock. The series of sequences of people enjoying the beach/ocean/boardwalk of a seaside resort puts in perspective of how those in the early 1900's enjoyed a recreational summer day. Seeing the wooden posts running perpendicular to the beach with ropes hanging from them, which allowed people in the water to enjoy the refreshing ocean with, to me, was such an eye opener of delight.
The copy I've seen on "A Visit To The Seaside, " only a two-minute fragment of the eight minutes originally produced, was near breathtaking in its color vibrancy. Sure, there was two-toned blurring when people moved rapidly, but for the technology existing at the time, it is simply astonishing that filmmakers were striving to push the envelop in achieving a modicum of success for putting color on the silver screen.
Kinemacolor had limited popularity in Europe before WW1, mainly because the system required a specially-made and pretty difficult-to-operate projector, using the same two-color wheel that had to be in sync with the processed film. Once the war had destroyed most of the film studios in Europe, as well as a new color film innovation emerging, Technicolor, it was pretty much over for Kinemacolor.
The copy I've seen on "A Visit To The Seaside, " only a two-minute fragment of the eight minutes originally produced, was near breathtaking in its color vibrancy. Sure, there was two-toned blurring when people moved rapidly, but for the technology existing at the time, it is simply astonishing that filmmakers were striving to push the envelop in achieving a modicum of success for putting color on the silver screen.
Kinemacolor had limited popularity in Europe before WW1, mainly because the system required a specially-made and pretty difficult-to-operate projector, using the same two-color wheel that had to be in sync with the processed film. Once the war had destroyed most of the film studios in Europe, as well as a new color film innovation emerging, Technicolor, it was pretty much over for Kinemacolor.
- springfieldrental
- Jan 20, 2021
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime10 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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