Hello Everyone,  

I am posting the following as a technology-based historical point of
interest, only.

Mark 

CNET News - Saturday, September 9, 2017 at 5:00 AM
A century ago, the first Technicolor film was a total disaster - CNET
A hundred years ago, a group of scientists and silent movie stars stepped
out of a railroad car into the Florida sunshine to shoot America's first
feature-length color motion picture.
That Technicolor production, "The Gulf Between," a romantic comedy now
considered a lost film, premiered on Sept. 13, 1917. But it was a long, long
way from sumptuously colorful classics like 1939's "Gone with the Wind" and
1952's "Singin' in the Rain" that will forever be synonymous with
Hollywood's golden age. Instead, some critics slammed the film for red and
green flashes and random objects showing up too bright. 
"The Gulf Between" was "meant to be a proof-of-concept," says Kelsey Eckert,
a Technicolor project archivist at Rochester, New York's George Eastman
Museum, home to some of the oldest surviving photography and film materials.
"They wanted a film they could show to investors and bigwigs in New York to
prove this whole Technicolor experiment was commercially viable. And it
wasn't."
The failures of the first Technicolor film teach some obvious lessons to
anyone looking to bring new technology to the big screen. Like today's 3D
pictures, "The Gulf Between," running about 58 minutes, was expensive and
hard on the eyes. And like today's 3D flicks -- which some call a gimmick
designed to make audiences forget they paid extra for a darker, less
brilliant version of a film -- it was a critical and artistic flop. A
commercial one, too. 
But the creators of Technicolor persevered. 
"The men and women of Technicolor tried and failed over and again --
Technicolor 1 is radically different than Technicolor 4 -- and even after
'succeeding' they never stopped tweaking and perfecting," says Ken Fox, also
a project archivist at the George Eastman Museum. "This quixotic
determination to succeed against what, at the beginning especially, must
have seemed like impossible odds, can serve as an important lesson for
filmmakers and tech developers alike." 
In living color
Technicolor brought a vibrant, highly saturated palette to motion pictures
that sometimes bathed them in hyperrealism. But the first Technicolor
offering wasn't the first color seen by moviegoing audiences. Even in the
earliest days of cinema, motion picture pioneers Thomas Edison and George
Méliès had some of their films hand-painted. The first system that captured
natural color on film was Kinemacolor, which caused a sensation in Britain
in 1908. Kinemacolor imploded amid patent disputes, but not before an
intrigued American engineer named Herbert Kalmus brought a fragment of
Kinemacolor film back to the US.
Herbert T. Kalmus, president and co-founder of Technicolor.
Bettmann 
Kalmus showed the film to his business partners Daniel Frost Comstock and W.
Burton Wescott. Kalmus and Wescott met at MIT, and had only a passing
interest in cinema as an art form. They were more interested in the
technical challenges -- and the moneymaking opportunities.
The three men founded the Technicolor Motion Picture Corporation in 1915.
Comstock was the inventor, Wescott turned ideas into products and Kalmus
served as the businessman.
To create a color film that did away with the fringing and flicker that
plagued existing color systems, the Technicolor team had to innovate all the
way from the treatment of the film to the design of the camera and
projector.
Their first Technicolor process involved shooting on black and white film
through a special beam-splitting prism and red and green filters. To play
the film back, the system was essentially reversed, with a special projector
that contained its own red and green filters. Like Kinemacolor, this was
known as an "additive" color system. 
The first tests made the Technicolor boys optimistic. Comstock and a team of
engineers headed to Palm Beach, Florida, where natural light and colorful
environments abounded. The resulting footage of sunsets, sailboats and fancy
women's outfits delighted the engineers -- and their investors.
The next step: a feature film that could be shown to a mass audience. The
plot of "The Gulf Between" is perhaps less notable than the innovation going
on behind the scenes. Based on the story "The Little Skipper" by Anthony
Kelly, it told of a young girl lost at sea and brought up by the family of a
smuggler. Later, she falls in love with a wealthy boy, only for his parents
to keep them apart until she rediscovers her own family.
The melodrama was "very typical of the kind of films of the time," Fox says.
"I think [Technicolor] really hoped they had a hit on their hands. But it
was the technical difficulties that undid them."
Lights, camera … accident
Technicolor's seasoned production manager, Carl Alfred "Doc" Willatt,
brought in a relatively inexperienced -- and therefore easily supervised --
27-year-old director, Wray Bartlett Physioc, to helm "The Gulf Between." The
cast was led by Vaudeville and Broadway actor Niles Welch and Grace Darmond,
a Canadian actress who later became known for her affair with fellow actress
Jean Acker. 
 
Silent movie actress Grace Darmond, star of "The Gulf Between."
John Springer Collection 
Filming in Technicolor required strong natural light, so the production
headed for Jacksonville, Florida, in December 1916. Jacksonville was a
popular filming location for the burgeoning motion picture industry because
it had clear skies most of the year. Even the film's interior scenes were
shot on open-air stages to capture as much light as possible. 
Jacksonville was also a mere 30 hours by train from New York. The
Technicolor team traveled to Jacksonville in style, gutting a Boston & Maine
sleeper railroad car and outfitting it with a cutting-edge film processing
lab, power plant and office, complete with a fireproof safe for storing
film. It was like the souped-up train car from "The Wild Wild West" having a
wacky adventure across a new frontier: color filmmaking. 
The first problem quickly emerged.
The film had to be dyed before use to make it more sensitive to light, but
the train car's lab produced clouded and unusable film. Comstock was
dispatched to Florida with two weeks to fix the problem -- or the backers
would pull the plug. According to the book "The Dawn of Technicolor" by
James Layton and David Pierce, Comstock found one engineer continually
asleep on the floor, while Burton Wescott was already "a wreck."
With only a day left until Comstock's deadline, the team identified tainted
hydrogen peroxide as the source of their woes. But shooting dragged on. The
new method of shooting in color required experimentation. For example, they
tried using exaggerated makeup but found light makeup worked better. Other
problems included repeated power outages and interminable reshoots.
Filming was extended through March 1917, and then April. Ultimately it would
be late May before stars Darmond and Welch returned to New York.
Sinking below the horizon
"The Gulf Between" premiered at a Baptist church in Technicolor's hometown
of Boston. Then came the crunch: a screening for press and industry on Sept.
21 in New York City to prove Technicolor was commercially viable. For this
crucial demonstration, Comstock himself operated the projector.
One reviewer noted "the fluffy golden hair of the heroine" and "a gorgeous
sunset actually photographed at long last in all its actual glow, a ruby orb
sinking below the horizon." But Billboard's critic noted red and green
flashes, random scarlet objects showing up too bright, and annoying eye
strain.
After years of work, the all-important preview screening suggested
Technicolor simply wasn't ready for market.
Technicolor set off traveling again in February 1918, this time taking "The
Gulf Between" on a roadshow tour. A florid ad in the Buffalo Courier
promised "a masterful achievement" that "glorified the motion picture …
faithfully reproduced in nature's own colors." You might expect to pay a
little more for such a spectacle, like when you see a 3D film today -- but
at Buffalo's Majestic theater, seats were 25, 50 or 75 cents for a box,
roughly the same as for other presentations. 
You don't want Oz to look real. You want it to be in Technicolor.   
Ken Fox, George Eastman Museum
There was no getting around the difficulties created by the special
projector required to show the film. It was temperamental and had to be
brought into each theater in a portable fireproof booth. Kalmus despaired
that it required an operator who was "a cross between a college professor
and an acrobat."
Even at this early stage of the industry, Thomas Edison and other film
innovators had already worked out how to make money from movies:
standardized equipment. When every theater had the same projector, you could
show your film anywhere. Technicolor Process 1 was the opposite of that. And
like 3D today, after the initial novelty wore off, customers weren't
prepared to pay a premium.
After some 15 engagements, the roadshow ground to a halt.
Depths of despair
The movie spanned six or seven reels of film, roughly twice as many reels as
other flicks of the time, because there was a red frame and a green frame
for every moment. Sadly, none of the film survives today. The only remaining
traces of this grand filmmaking experiment are a couple of restored frames
and some behind-the-scenes photos in the George Eastman Museum, the
Smithsonian Institute and the Motion Picture Academy's library. 
"It wasn't like the industry as we know it today -- there was no wide
distribution, no TV or home video," Fox says. "They weren't of the mindset
to preserve these films, even a successful film, let alone a film that
flopped."
After the disastrous New York screening, Kalmus and Comstock were reportedly
"in the depths of despair." Fortunately their work as a research and
development outfit on other photography and cinematic projects kept them
afloat. After a break when the US entered World War I -- Comstock went off
to develop submarine detection gear -- they carried the lessons of
Technicolor Process 1 into researching Technicolor Process 2.
The first lesson was to switch from a problem-plagued additive color system
to subtractive color, the basis of modern color filmmaking that captured a
more natural range of color and didn't require a special projector.
The company ultimately went through five Technicolor processes. They cracked
it with Process 4, the version of Technicolor used for "The Wizard of Oz."
"You don't want Oz to look real," Fox says. "You want it to be in
Technicolor." 

Tech Culture: From film and television to social media and games, here's
your place for the lighter side of tech. 
Batteries Not Included: The CNET team shares experiences that remind us why
tech stuff is cool. 

Original Article at:
https://www.cnet.com/news/technicolor-100-years-the-gulf-between/#ftag=CAD59
0a51e


-- 
The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries 
list.

If you have any questions or concerns about the running of this list, or if you 
feel that a member's post is inappropriate, please contact the owners or 
moderators directly rather than posting on the list itself.

Your Mac Visionaries list moderator is Mark Taylor.  You can reach mark at:  
macvisionaries+modera...@googlegroups.com and your owner is Cara Quinn - you 
can reach Cara at caraqu...@caraquinn.com

The archives for this list can be searched at:
http://www.mail-archive.com/macvisionaries@googlegroups.com/
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"MacVisionaries" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to