Super 8 Film Cutting And Editing

Field Amateur home movies
Went Obsolete Late 1980s
Made Obsolete By Video Cameras
Knowledge Assumed Cutting and Gluing 8mm film
When useful In the early 70 taking shots of you jumping around the beach of villamarina. Also, amateur film-makers sometimes edit this way, though more and more telecine the film and edit it digitally

Into the early 1980s, there were no affordable handheld videotape recorders with a camera. There was, however, 8mm film called Super 8 or Single 8. The 8-mm cartridges could take scenes with about 2.5 minutes length. Then, the cartridge was full and had to be replaced by a fresh one. When holiday was over one turned back home with a ton of 8-mm cartridges. After developing in the local drugstore, one soon received many little reels with each full of 2.5 minutes of holiday happiness.

To produce a family-entertaining piece of vacation memories you have to use a special cut and glue device. It was used to align the film pieces and glue them together correctly. Then you control the scene at a special and very fragile preview projector and do cut-and-glue over and over. Until the movie was completed. Then you force your family to gather in front of a projection screen and enjoy your work. A good time for this was usually Christmas.

Most families simply stuck to shooting scenes under 2:30 seconds; film and development were expensive, and movie editing takes a lot of time and energy.

 
skills/super8filmcuttingandediting.txt · Last modified: 2009/01/13 11:33 (external edit)
 
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