Two Questions!

Forum covering all aspects of small gauge cinematography! This is the main discussion forum.

Moderator: Andreas Wideroe

Post Reply
mohican
Posts: 163
Joined: Sat Aug 07, 2004 1:14 am
Location: France/New York State
Contact:

Two Questions!

Post by mohican »

1) I picked up a pair of Eumig C3 regular 8mm cameras recently. The spring in both cameras seems very strong and for eighty+ percent of a run, the speed (16 fps) seems accurate. However, the very end of the run is MUCH slower. My Bolexes and Beaulieus maintain the same speed then stop dead. Any Eumig C3 users have the same experience? Is it the nature of the camera?
2) I viewed a recently restored dvd of "Potemkin". I would swear it was cranked and projected at 16fps. I liked the effect. Anyone aware if this films' technical history? :?
Make those little films if only for yourself
User avatar
gianni1
Senior member
Posts: 1011
Joined: Tue Sep 21, 2004 10:30 am
Location: Bag End, Hobbiton
Contact:

Post by gianni1 »

I gotz a C3M, does exactly the same thing. Must be a feature, not a bug...
:-k ... it's a warning that the motor's about to stop?

Gianni
Dusty
Posts: 87
Joined: Mon Aug 04, 2003 4:11 am
Contact:

Re: Two Questions!

Post by Dusty »

That's the nature of a spring. Fancier cameras (your Bolexes and Beaulieus) will have a governor or something similar to cut the motor when the spring's tension begins to drop. In most clockwork cameras, the spring just winds down.
mohican wrote:2) I viewed a recently restored dvd of "Potemkin". I would swear it was cranked and projected at 16fps. I liked the effect. Anyone aware if this films' technical history? :?
I don't know for certain, but it wouldn't be at all surprising. There never was any real standard speed during the silent era, it ranged between 16 and 26fps, with 20fps being about average.

Movies started out being very slow, around 12fps. Cinemas realized they could fit more showings in if they increased the projection rate, so they may have shown movies shot at around 12fps at 16fps. Filmmakers cottoned on to this, and started increasing their own film rates to match those of the cinemas, who in turn increased theirs again. This continued up until the advent of sound demanded a constant speed on both sides.

Nowadays, you have another problem to contend with. As many as 80% of all silents are presumed lost or partially lost. A decade ago, films like Metropolis were missing a considerable amount of footage. Today, however, most of it has been recovered (although there are scenes still missing). With different copies of varying completeness floating around, people tend to buy the one that's the longest, thinking it's the most complete. Unscrupulous sellers, however, will simply take their old edition, with all its missing parts, and decrease the frame rate to make it seem longer.
User avatar
reflex
Senior member
Posts: 2131
Joined: Wed Aug 18, 2004 7:25 am
Real name: James Grahame
Location: It's complicated
Contact:

Re: Two Questions!

Post by reflex »

mohican wrote:2) I viewed a recently restored dvd of "Potemkin". I would swear it was cranked and projected at 16fps. I liked the effect. Anyone aware if this films' technical history? :?
It was hand-cranked at 16fps. Many films of the era was shot at 16fps and projected at 18fps. I'm honestly not sure if this was the intent with Battleship Potemkin.
BigBeaner
Posts: 930
Joined: Sat Dec 25, 2004 5:50 am
Location: Boston-MA/Los Angeles-CA
Contact:

Post by BigBeaner »

I think most people when it concerns to the technical history they just think about the editing.
Post Reply