sábado, 4 de agosto de 2018

Nunca se Escreveu Tanto Sobre a Película — Parte 5



Os meses passam, a actualidade noticiosa renova-se a um ritmo estonteante, mas a atenção da imprensa especializada em torno da película, nomeadamente dos seus desafios e destino, não apresenta um fim anunciado.

Desde os bastidores da Kodak e da UCLA Film & Television Archive, passando pelo mediatismo que a versão unrestored de 2001: ODISSEIA NO ESPAÇO apadrinhada por Christopher Nolan conheceu, e até ao levantamento de filmes que ainda apostam no analógico, os últimos tempos foram realmente abundantes em conteúdo sobre a película nos seus vários formatos.

"In the digital age, some directors still choose to shoot on film."
Jacob T. Swinney, in How Different Types of Film Affect What You See on Screen, Fandor.

"13 cinematograhers shot on celluloid, including eight of the 21 competition films gunning for the Palme d’Or."
Chris O'Falt, in Cannes 2018: Here Are the Cameras Used To Shoot 32 of This Year’s Films, IndieWire.

"Film is the best analogy that’s ever been devised for the way the eye sees."
Kristopher Tapley, in Christopher Nolan Goes Analog Route to Preserve Celluloid Beauty of '2001: A Space Odyssey', Variety.

"Paul Simon never wrote a song about Kodak Ektachrome, so you’ve probably never heard of it. But you have seen pictures shot on the film: The astronauts brought it to the moon in 1969, and National Geographic photographers have carried it around the globe."
Stan Horaczek, in Inside the Facility Where Kodak brings Film Back to Life, Popular Science.

"Finding a nitrate film that is safe to project is a challenge, which has made seeing nitrate on the big screen an exceedingly rare experience."
Nitrate Film: From the Vault to the Screen, UCLA Film & Television Archive.

"The problem is that celluloid’s nostalgic appeal is dominating the conversation and characterizing celluloid as a format of the past, rather than as a tool for safeguarding film heritage for the future."
Meg Shields, in Fetishizing Celluloid Is Bad For Film Preservation, Film School Rejects.

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