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Everything posted by Movie Collector OH
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ONE FOOT IN HEAVEN (1941) ONE MAN'S WAY (1964) STARS IN MY CROWN (1950) LITTLE MINISTER, THE (1934) SANDPIPER, THE (1965)
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I never really got into home/consumer-marketed stuff like this, but that sounds like some variety of a home-made record, which preceded magnetic tape for a while. From video description: Before they were made obsolete by magnetic tape recorders, there were machines that allowed people to make their own recordings onto discs. Companies provided blank records made of thin acetate over cardboard—or sometimes glass- or metal-core—along with home-recording devices in packages like the Wilcox-Gay Recordio Disc and the PhonOcord Playhouse. Here's a picture of one: http://www.phonozoic.net/recordio/mac.... You could find the recorders in stores that carried items like cameras, radios, pianos, furniture, and appliances. My husband picked up a pile of these discs at a garage sale. Some of the recordings are blank. Others have dialogue (greetings from a nephew to his uncle), amateur singers (a duet by Glen and June), radio personalities (Fibber McGee and Molly) , recitals, re-recordings of popular recording artists, etc. There's even one disc given out by a department store—"Best Wishes from Bullock's" to celebrate engaged couples’ upcoming nuptials. These cut-your-own recordings are a selection from Wagner's, Capitol, Federal, Packard-Bell, and Sabortone. And here's a guy demonstrating a home stylus-based disc recorder he restored, using disposable red plastic plates as a recording medium: (P.S. he shouldn't have to take it apart just to see the peak indicator, but maybe that's just a consequence of the restoration)
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Speaking of home audio. I don't know if anyone would appreciate this or not, but one of the more interesting audio experiments I have tried at home was a small audio system specifically for playing back older (much older) recordings. Some time ago I acquired a Bogen tube amp, it is one of the last tube amps they produced, a 40 watt mono tube amp from the late 1960s. The one I got is close to being in like-new condition. Then I pulled out a stage monitor left over from my sound days (EAW LA212) - full range 2-way with 12" woofer and 2" compression driver - somewhat pronounced upper bass without compensation - and the highs also roll off a bit due to the larger 2" compression exit aperture. (Opening is larger than the highest frequencies, which would typically need an aperture of 1" or 1.4" to deliver those highest frequencies without "beaming", so it is rolled off a bit on the top end.) I set it on the floor, which enhanced the bass response some and killed the high end just a bit...just like a big old "hi-fi cabinet". Maybe you already see where I am going with this. 😁 Then... connected to my computer I put a simple MobilePre external sound card - for analog input/output. I connected the output of that to an audio isolation transformer - to safely couple the PC equipment to the tube amp and properly lift the ground. I had a bunch of connector issues, as you might imagine, but in the end I was smiling like a kid. The resulting sound was reminiscent of an older "hi-fi radio/phono cabinet" from the 1960s or before, except with better sounding speakers. It only plays at modest volume levels, as the speakers are not overly efficient and I am only dealing with a 40 watt amp. So this generally works and sounds best with stuff that came out before The Who. So far this was just a temporary experiment for me, just killing some time, but I really liked the aesthetics of it. The "sound" of it matched what I was playing on it, just as I remembered hearing it before, like this cut from 1959 which I actually DO have put away somewhere on LP. Except this time I was just playing YT videos off my computer. The only thing missing was the record scratches. Oh, and playing it in stereo, as the Bogen amp is a mono amp. So I hit on at least one point from your post - the potential for vacuum tube amps to add character.
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No problem, it was still snowing one more time around here about a week ago. So that means April is probably just around the corner for me. 😁
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An early look at June. (click link & scroll down to bottom of page) https://www.moviecollectoroh.com/nightly/sched.htm
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Yep, have a look at Nitrateville. Film collectors. https://www.nitrateville.com/
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Cinerama and ArcLight theaters to close for good
Movie Collector OH replied to cinecrazydc's topic in General Discussions
More on the film itself. Here are some comparisons image-wise. The Cinerama screen used three 35mm films. Also of note, the original IMAX (15/70) was 10x the surface area of a 35mm film, or about 3x the surface area of 5/70 (70mm - Todd AO, Super Panavsion 70, etc) Comparative film formats (includes 35mm, Cinerama, IMAX) The soundtrack for the 15/70 IMAX played back on a separate machine, a 6-channel analog system which used regular 35mm optical film. Disney World theme parks also used optical film as a medium for repetitive sound loops (as it was more robust than magnetic tape) on their rides, shows, and around the park, prior to arrival of long-form digital storage media in the 1980s/90s. The IMAX projectors went straight from 35mm optical audio to compact disc. The 35mm audio decks remained in use for their older films. These didn't use time code for audio alignment like digital media, but rather operated on electronically synchronized motors - similar to the mechanical synchronization of the Vitaphone system but with some updates... In simpler comparative form: 15/70, 5/70, and standard 35mm: And finally what an original-style 15/70 IMAX screen looks like. Much attention has been given to side-to-side peripheral vision with the various widescreen formats. IMAX 15/70 does that but also immerses the audience in top-to-bottom action. -
Cinerama and ArcLight theaters to close for good
Movie Collector OH replied to cinecrazydc's topic in General Discussions
I read a bunch of articles about this before. The huge IMAX that most people think of is 70/15 format, meaning 15 perforations (sprocket holes) per frame, run through the projector sideways (horizontally). That is much larger square film area compared to any other film format. The others had 5 perforations, for widescreen 65 or 70mm films, run through the projector vertically. Anyhow, all that has been discontinued. Now almost all IMAX theaters just show digital media like everyone else. Back when they were transitioning away from film, the IMAX projectionists were just trying to grin and bear it. The screen size of the original IMAX was a rectangular 5 stories tall and 7 stories wide, I think. The first movie I saw was a 26 minute short called "To Fly". Here is a horribly scanned 2 minute segment, you will have to just use your imagination. The last few moments of this segment had everyone in the theater gasping, as did many other scenes with slowly moving wide panoramic shots like this, and I remember I grabbed the arm rests of my seat, it seemed as if the whole theater was moving side to side and up and down. -
There is (or at least used to be) a channel on cable called "EPXDVN" or Epix Drive-in. They showed stuff like American Graffiti. I haven't checked it in about 5 years though.
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Apparently Judi Dench is a jealous old cow.
Movie Collector OH replied to LornaHansonForbes's topic in General Discussions
😄 Well I don't have any particular order of preference, other than Gojo being in town for me (about an hour or so), so I could literally drop in there and talk to some of them during their smoke breaks, pick their brains a bit, and report back here on what they are smoking. Don't get any pumice in your eyes. -
Keep this channel an entertainment channel, please!
Movie Collector OH replied to Kleb's topic in General Discussions
Just saw The War With Grandpa (2020), starring Robert DeNiro, over at my neighbors. That started off with DeNiro, as a crotchety-crotch old grandpa, gratuitously harassing/ physically assaulting a black guy. No problems with that, right? No I didn't think so. BTW, we immediately thought of that Coming To America scene too. 😁 -
Apparently Judi Dench is a jealous old cow.
Movie Collector OH replied to LornaHansonForbes's topic in General Discussions
The "politically correct" idiots get exposed. -
Apparently Judi Dench is a jealous old cow.
Movie Collector OH replied to LornaHansonForbes's topic in General Discussions
This reminds me of DL Hand Cleaner, which I used to use many years ago after working on the car or out and around the house. It is a soft lanolin-based hand cleaner. They've apparently changed their can from a dark blue cardboard can with metal top and bottom and plastic lid, to this. https://www.permatex.com/products/hand-care/hand-cleaners/dl-permatex-blue-label-cream-hand-cleaner/ In more recent years I have used either Zep or Gojo after working on the car. Both of these companies offer an Orange-scented product with pumice, for thicker grime (one of my friends who used to be an auto mechanic pointed these out to me years ago). https://www.gojo.com/en/Product/0958-04 https://www.homedepot.com/p/ZEP-48-oz-Original-Orange-Industrial-Hand-Soap-R45710/312550648 -
Apparently Judi Dench is a jealous old cow.
Movie Collector OH replied to LornaHansonForbes's topic in General Discussions
Things that cannot be "unseen" and scar people for life. -
Apparently Judi Dench is a jealous old cow.
Movie Collector OH replied to LornaHansonForbes's topic in General Discussions
Or maybe something revealing happened at The Mouse that changed their perspective on things, which wouldn't surprise me the least. Which reminds me, I need to check my traps around the house. P.S. what a title for a thread. -
klicken Sie hier: https://pluto.tv/live-tv/johnny-carson-tv?utm_source=homepage
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Name of Grisly TCM "Safe Driving" Short
Movie Collector OH replied to Bob Dobbs's topic in Information, Please!
Glad to help! -
Name of Grisly TCM "Safe Driving" Short
Movie Collector OH replied to Bob Dobbs's topic in Information, Please!
Yeah, the online schedules can differ from the on-screen schedules. I don't put much thought into the shorts on the online schedule, other than to document the times they actually do show up on it.
