First some maths: film historian and cinematic technologist,
Christopher Bird revealed that he would be cranking his 1919 Ernemann projector some 2,100
times during the course of this event – this live cinema is the interface
between man and machine we keep on hearing about especially as from 1895 to
1922, the period spanning the films we were to watch, were similarly powered by
elbow grease. Added to this were the almost chromesthesiatic improvisations of
John Sweeney’s ten digits on piano and the combined perceptions of an audience
that could hear the projector whirring, always aware of both men’s efforts as
we experienced the past in vibrant colour.
Watching these daring adventures in film technique was fascinating
but also strangely humbling especially when, to quote another of Chris’s figures,
we watched a hand-coloured film that would have required sixteen images hand
colouring for every foot of film equating to one second. So, for Georges
Méliès's A Trip to the Moon (1902) which is 853 ft long, some 13,600
frames would have had to be hand worked for every copy of the film, this was
clearly incredibly labour intensive but worth it for the popularity and
spectacular response from the viewing public.
In the first section we saw the results of such labour with
four films shot in black and white and then painted directly onto each frame of
film. The first was from the very beginning with a black and white extract of Workers
Leaving the Lumière Factory (1895) which was, like most films here, a
modern 35mm copied from original materials
The Kingdom of The Fairies |
This was followed by part of Louis Lumière’s Roundabout
in Paris (1896) then Georges Hatot’s The Death of Jean-Paul Marat (1897)
both of which were hand coloured in this style. A lengthy extract from George Méliès's
The Kingdom of The Fairies (1903) followed, the full film is some
1,050 feet long, so around 16,800 hand-coloured frames and, at two cranks per
second, Chris would have moved the projector’s handle… quite a lot!
The story was picked up by Ian Christie who reminded us of the
Lumiere’s first screening in London in February 1896 at what is now the Regent Street
Cinema I believe. British pioneer Robert Paul also projected on the same day in
the evening with the Electrical Journal sure that the technical hitches bedevilling
both screenings would soon be ironed out. Méliès bought his first camera from Robert
Paul who was working in colour right from the start as advertised in his first
catalogues. There are sadly so few colour examples extant as the first
archivists copied colour films, some of which only projected as colour via
tinted lenses, in black and white.
Ian screened Paul’s Come Along, Do (1898) the world’s
first two-shot film and tinted it to look as it might have done at the time. The
Dancer’s Dream (1905) was also shown and is the only known Paul film in its
original colour, found by BFI and available on the iPlayer. It’s a very Méliès
type film with stop motion and camera trickery of a fairly advanced nature – it’s
easy to forget how on trend the British were at this time.
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Modern Sculptors |
Back to celluloid and Pathé pioneering new system called stencil colour which gave much sharper results than hand colouring with a separate stencil for every colour ensuring that there was no colour bleeding over the edge of images. Even though cutting the stencils was laborious, the result automated the colouring process and continued until late twenties in spectacular films such as Casanova (1927) and Michael Strogoff (1926) both staring that most colourful of performers, Ivan Mozzhukhin! Segundo de Chomon was a master of both trick films and stencil colour and his Modern Sculptors (1908) was screened next – a fine example of both from George’s more darkly-comic Spanish “cousin”.
The next step was for filmmakers to attempt to add the
colour at point of source and this is where Edward Turner and Marshall Lee come
in with a system that enabled the capture of red, green and blue images on adjacent
frames in different tones. This required
a projector running at triple speed - 48 frames a second vs 16 – and on the
1902 fragment we saw, this still gives the impression of three colours albeit
with slight fringing as subjects moved too quickly to be captured by all three filters.
We did, however, see a spectacular yellow sunflower.
Now to Bristol and William Friese Greene’s Biocolour which,
as its name suggested, filmed in two colours with alternate green and red
frames shot through a filter for each colour and double speed at 32 frames a
second producing a jumpy shot of an omnibus not quite caught in both tinted cells.
It looked like one of the least successful efforts but would impact the story
in a major way…
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George Albert Smith in between hypnotising and inventing |
So, now for Kinemacolor! Developed in 1908 it was
commercially very successful at a time when there were hardly any cinemas and
with films, much like magic lanterns, mostly being an attraction on the travelling
fairgrounds. Hypnotist, psychic and magic lantern projectionist George Albert
Smith… invented the system, which was a
two-colour additive process that photographed film behind red and green filters
rotating at the front of the lens.
John Adderley, historian and cinematographer explained how
the machine worked the difference between the Kinemacolor had a Butterfly Gate
compared with a Williamson Gate – in the front there was a wheel with different
filters. John demonstrated the process and we saw the alternating red and green
… it’s a fascinating machine and if you want to find out more there is an exhibition
of this and similar machines at The Race to Cinema Collection at the Bournemouth
Film School
The film in the camera is black and white and being projected
too but there are red and green filters picking up the colours from the
original capture. Chris explained that there are only five surviving Kinemacolor
projectors left and this 1919 Ernemann projector has been adapted by
projectionist and engineer Nigel Lister to support the continued projection of these
materials.
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Lake Garda, looking slightly greener on YouTube... |
There was a lovely short, Pageant of New Romney, Hythe
and Sandwich (1910) directed by George Albert Smith and showing the people
of these Kent towns re-enacting their past, an event itself now in the past but
colourfully so. This was followed by a longer film, Lake Garda (1910) a print courtesy of collector Dave Cleveland and “…
the single best surviving example of Kinemacolor…” according to Chris and it
fully supported that assertion. During the travelogue, there is an optical
illusion as the water looks blue which is technically impossible given that the
source is red and green tints… but the camera never lies and we saw it with our
own eyes proving that there’s an element of suggestion in the way we perceive
true colour. This is a magical film and really captures the Italian lake in
dreamy colours, reds, greens, those “blues” and more beyond.
Sadly, Kinemacolor was to lose out in a legal challenge from
William Friese Greene in 1915 who argued it was a duplicate of his Biocolour process
and, as Luke McKernan pointed out, the inability to show “blue” was one of the
sticking points. We saw with our own eyes the superiority of the Kinemacolor
process in terms of stability and effect but so it goes, F-G was unable to
capitalise on his concept all the same and things moved on swiftly elsewhere
with the invention of Technicolor “Process 1” in 1916 and by 1922 the company
had developed “Process 2” with a camera which used a two-strip colour process –
similar in concept to Kinemacolor but with two filtered images used to create a
subtracted coloured print with red and green stock cemented together in a print
that could be presented using a normal projector.
As Ian Christie said, the proof of concept was to make a feature film and that was The Toll of the Sea (1922) restored in the 1990s by the UCL archive and available on the US National Film Preservation website in high quality. The film is also notable for staring Anna May Wong in her first leading role as Lotus Flower, the object of the affection of the American man, Allen Carver (Kenneth Harlen) she rescues from the sea. Written by Frances Marion it’s a loose re-telling of Madame Butterfly and Carver must choose between Lotus Flower and a woman from his own background… “Elsie”.
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Anna May Wong |
Whilst Allen, fully recuperated returns to the United States,
Lotus Flower gives birth to a son she names Allen and waits for her love’s
return. But when he comes back it is with Elsie as his new wife and Lotus
Flower has to make the best choice for her son… or at least that so often
presented as such. It’s quite the thing that she has a child with Carver as
that’s rather specific for Hollywood at the time. Oh, Mister Hays…
The last reel of the film is lost and so the restorers shot
new film of the Pacific Ocean in October 1985 using an authentic two-colour Technicolor
camera with intertitles recreated from Frances Marion’s original scenario. It
works very well especially as we all know how it’s got to end.
Anna May Wong is a star to us now, and her abilities far outstripped her
success for reasons that we all understand. Here she shows even at 17-18 how
skilled she was and how much of a gift to the cinematographer, J.A. Ball and
director Chester M. Franklin who makes the most of his remarkable lead.
John Sweeney illuminated the story with his melodious
inventiveness, his experience and tonal flexibility being first rate as it had
all evening. He’s very good with any flowing water, but seas especially, and his
emotional narrative was equally fluid and accomplished!
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Kenneth Harlen and Anna in the garden |
A last word on Kinemacolor… we also saw Stephen Herbert’s
1995 test film, shot by Dave Locke – also on duty tonight - which used the
process to capture a colourful group on the Southbank. This is something akin
to experimental archaeology and enables the historians and cine-technologists
to understand more about the making of the media as well as its meaning and
message.
Let’s hope for more of this kind of thing! Blessed are the
archivists and the projectionists!
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Christopher Bird making the magic work (photo courtesy of Stefanie Benz) |