The world of film that we once knew is drastically changing. This year studios are
beginning to stop the distribution of 35-millimeters films and will making the
official and permanent switch to digital filmmaking.
35mm film has been used in the industry since the early
periods of film. However, with advancements in film technology movies that use
digital technology are able to present brighter and clearer picture and sound
over that of 35mm film, offering a better experience overall for moviegoers.
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| 35-millimeter movie camera Photo via www.sandiegoreader.com |
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| 35-millimeter film reel Photo via entertainment.msn.com |
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| Christopher Nolan with a 35mm camera on the set of The Dark Knight Rises Photo via TIME |
Director Christopher Nolan, who’s well known films include Memento, Inception, and The Dark Knight Trilogy, is a firm
supporter of preserving the use of celluloid filmmaking. Nolan’s film and box office success The Dark Knight Rises was filmed on
celluloid.
Memento Trailer (2000)
Inception Trailer (2010)
The Dark Knight Rises Trailer (2012)
According to The University of California Institute For Research in
the Arts (UCIRA), Nolan had invited many film directors such as Michael Bay,
Duncan Jones and Edgar Wright to an exclusive first look at the first six
minutes of the film before the film was released but had the ulterior motive of
making a case for the continued use of 35mm film. Nolan pleaded to his fellow
directors about what 35mm film can do. Nolan says, “The danger comes from
filmmakers not asserting their right to choose that format. If they stop
exercising that choice, it will go away”. Director James Cameron started the
movement to digital filmmaking in 2009 with his film Avatar distributed by 20th Century Fox. The blockbuster could be only be
screened using digital projectors resulting in the first wave of many theaters
quickly upgrading their projection technology to that of digital. Recently,
Paramount Pictures has followed in footsteps of 20th Century Fox by
releasing The Wolf of Wall Street the
company’s first all digital motion picture. According to Ars Technica, a technology
news and information website, Anchorman2: The Legend Continues was the company’s last film released on celluloid.
Avatar Trailer (2009)
The Wolf of Wall Street Trailer (2013)
Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues Trailer (2013)
The switch over to digital not only affects the studios and
the filmmakers but also the movie theaters that screen the films. Now, theaters
across the country are going to have to upgrade to digital projection, if they
have not done so already, if they wish to continue films that come out of
Hollywood.
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| Director Martin Scorsese on the set of Hugo with a digital camera Photo via creativecow.net |
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| The Clayton Theatre in Dagsboro, Delaware Photo via GoogleMaps |
I recently made a trip to The Clayton Theatre, a small local
movie theater located in Dagsboro, Delaware to visit owner Joanna Howe who just
upgraded her theater to digital projection this past week. Howe explains that the switch to digital
has been a long time coming, she says “the studios came to us about a year ago
and announced that after this, the end of 2013 they were going to start to phase
out 35-millimeter film completely”. How had started raising money in February
of last year in order to switch The Clayton Theatre over digital, knowing that
if she upgrade her business would suffer. She states that “it was on us and
other small theatres across the country, that if we didn’t go digital we would
go dark”. It took Howe one year to
raise the $65,000 she needed to upgrade to digital projection and took three
days to install the new projection system.
The movement to end the production of 35mm film will
completely change the industry especially when it comes to distribution
costs. UCIRA states that digital
technology is a cheaper and faster than 35mm prints making the switch to digital
beneficial to both the film creator and distributor. David Johnson, a film
professor at Salisbury University located in Salisbury, Maryland says, “it
simply costs more money to manufacture film, to process film, and to screen
films…all those things cost money than digital technology”. Joanne confirms
this explaining that “it cost the studios quite a bit more, about a thousand
dollars a film to send a 35-millimeter print, where as now that’s dropped to
about one thousand dollars a film to send it out”. Studios no longer want to pay to physically print and ship
films. In 2010 the former chairman of Universal Pictures told Variety that studios “stand to eliminate
billions of dollars in costs in coming years without spending very much”.
In the very near future, 35mm film will be a thing of the
past and the new digital technology will change the production the films in the
industry.





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