tailieunhanh - KODAK FILM HISTORY Chronology of Motion Picture Films - 1889 to 1939
This paper intends to use psychoanalysis to discover where and how the fascination of film is reinforced by pre-existing patterns of fascination already at work within the individual subject and the social formations that have moulded him. It takes as starting point the way film reflects, reveals and even plays on the straight, socially established interpretation of sexual difference which controls images, erotic ways of looking and spectacle. It is helpful to understand what the cinema has been, how its magic has worked in the past, while attempting a theory and a practice which will challenge this cinema of. | KODAK FILM HISTORY Chronology of Motion Picture Films - 1889 to 1939 1889 - The first commercial transparent roll film perfected by Eastman and his research chemist was put on the market. The availability of this flexible film made possible the development of Thomas Edison s motion picture camera in 1891. A new corporation - The Eastman Company - was formed taking over the assets of the Eastman Dry Plate and Film Company. 1909 - First public announcement of Eastman Safety Acetate Support based on successful burning test results vs. Nitrate Support. 1910 - First Safety Film acetate offered for sale in 22mm. 1912 Eastman provides Cellulose Acetate Base film to Thomas A. Edison Inc. Orange NJ for use in Home Kinescopes Kodak Supplied 22mm wide film containing 3 linear rows of pictures with perforations between the rows. 1916 - Cine Negative Film Type E - Orthochromatic 1917 - Cine Negative Film Type F - Orthochromatic 1921 - Cine-Positive tinted stocks available in lavender red green blue pink light amber yellow orange and dark amber. - Super Speed Cine Negative Film - Orthochromatic 1922 - Kodak Panchromatic Cine Film In 1912 George Eastman was one of the first American industrialists to organize a research laboratory. This picture was taken at Kodak Research Laboratories in Rochester New York in 1920. 1923 Manufacture of matrix stock for 2 color T echnicolor process as well as print stock Kalmus Positive Kodak made amateur motion pictures practical with the introduction of 16 mm reversal film on cellulose acetate safety base the first 16 mm CINE-KODAK Motion Picture Camera and the KODASCOPE Projector. The immediate popularity of 16 mm movies resulted in a network of Kodak processing laboratories throughout the world. 1926 - Motion Picture Duplicating Film for duplicate negatives 1928 Type II and Type III Cine Negative Panchromatic Films Kodacolor a lenticular additive color film introduced for 16mm movies. Motion pictures in color became a reality for amateur .
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