CliveC
Well-known
Just came across this story today (from November 26).
How many people do they have working making film in Rochester?
How many people do they have working making film in Rochester?
Does Kodak in Rochester still make the photographic film that Kodak Alaris now sells?
Anyone know if "It's a Wonderful Life" was shot on Kodak stock? 😉
new stock i buy in budapest has an expire date of 2014-2015. it cannot be that old.
Anyone know if "It's a Wonderful Life" was shot on Kodak stock? 😉
See? I come in here being a smartass, making a Mr. Potter firing people around the holidays joke, and someone comes along with actual fact and a bit of film history. Ah, RFF! 🙂The original nitrate camera negative for "It's Wonderful Life" was lost years ago.
The film was preserved first in the 90's by Film Technology, and some subsequent work (c2002ish if I remember right) was done by Crest National Labs. In both cases, preservation elements were made to fine grain duplicating stock, mostly likely 5234.
Note- I was involved in the subsequent work and our work on it was minor.
See? I come in here being a smartass, making a Mr. Potter firing people around the holidays joke, and someone comes along with actual fact and a bit of film history. Ah, RFF! 🙂
I guess the real question is this: will Kodak still make photographic film?
Probably not for very long, unless they either make (all) casting a separate entity or integrate photographic film manufacturing into Alaris. The current structure, with production a appendix of a division that has already demonstrated little interest in film, does not bode too well - it creates incentives for Alaris to look for a cheaper supplier, and relieves Kodak of the requirement to continue production...
i don't think it makes any sense for anyone to move film production to an other factory.
and i don't see why would kodak want to stop film production in the forseeable future. if kodak survives the revoltuion in digital distribution, and it is rentable to manufacture mostly camera negatives and archival film, that is.
Every modern MBA is taught that rentability is irrelevant - growth is what matters. And there is no growth in film - so it is nothing that a company led by a Mr. Perez will continue...
And there is no growth in film