laughingrat: Buster Keaton (Go West)
laughingrat ([personal profile] laughingrat) wrote in [community profile] classicfilm2010-12-06 12:52 pm

The end of an era

The End: Why projectionists will soon be no more. Great article on a part of the film experience most of us never think about.

I'm dubious about the excerpt on the last page, about the nitrate film--not that I doubt that it happened, but I thought vinegar syndrome happened to acetate film, not nitrate. Anyone have more/better info?
twistedchick: watercolor painting of coffee cup on wood table (Default)

[personal profile] twistedchick 2010-12-06 09:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I can't speak to vinegar syndrome, but I do know that nitrate film was insanely flammable. A few decades ago, a lot of old film that had not been catalogued completely yet was stored in an outbuilding at the George Eastman House in Rochester, where they specialize in preserving old film. In the middle of the winter, as I remember, the building caught fire from the inside and burned to the ground -- taking with it most of the two-reel Charlie Chaplins, a lot of the Buster Keatons, and some of the only copies of the first one-reelers and two-reelers from the first decade of the 1900s and before. What I remember is something about someone leaving a light on in the building, and the heat from that started the fire in the film; of course, I wasn't there so I can't say how it was stored.