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14th Todd AO Festival at The Schauburg Cinerama
Impressions from 70mm weekend in Karlsruhe 2018 |
Read more at in70mm.com The 70mm Newsletter
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Written by: Mark
Lyndon, London, UK |
Date:
10.11.2018 |
Todd-AO
Festival guests Margaret Weedon and Mark Lyndon enjoying ice cream in
Karlsruhe. Picture by Sebastian Rosacker
As every student should know, 70mm is still the best format for the presentation
of the moving image invented, to date. The finest festival for the celebration
of this state of the art of motion pictures, takes place in the
Schauburg Film Theatre, Karlsruhe, a university city in Germany; every autumn. Celebrants,
who come from all over the world, are very well taken care of, and so come back
year after year.
Here is the only venue to see
"2OO1: A Space Odyssey", as it should be seen, on the
deeply curved Cinerama screen. Some of us saw it, dare I admit, all of fifty
years ago and are still just as awed and impressed by it. This year, the much
talked and written about Nolan print was screened, to great acclaim. A truly
ravishing print of Kurosawa's masterpiece
"Dersu Uzula", reminded delegates of the
strong bonds of friendship that drew them together, from far and wide, to the
Todd AO Festival. A real delight was the UFA production
"Hauptmann Florian von
der Mühle", as fresh as a daisy after a mere fifty years. Satire from the old
east? I kid you not. Sovcolor or Orwo, or whatever it is called, forever! "West
Side Story" still dazzled, with the agonies and ecstasies of the star crossed
lovers transposed to mid twentieth century Manhatten.
Jack Nicholson gave a career defining performance in "Hoffa", ably assisted and
directed by Danny De Vito. The print was outstanding. For comic relief, we were
treated to the Jacques Tati swansong
"Play Time", an extraordinary insight into the modern times of fifty years ago.
Fast forwarding to next year 2019, in the remote future, "Blade Runner" was
presented in a desaturated print, which strangely enhanced the eerie sense of
alienation and foreboding. As Sir Ridley Scott admitted,
Douglas Trumbull
deserved great credit for his rôle in creating one of the greatest dystopian
visions in film history.
Cinema is never more compelling than when it creates a truly convincing dream
like quality on a giant screen. Morten Skallerud deserves great credit for
"A
Year Along the Abandoned Road". One of the finest stop frame films ever made,
probably. It was a tremendous privilege to dine with the Skallerud's on the eve
of the Festival. The serious student of the moving image was confronted by
something quite unique on the last day of September, on Sunday morning. Never
before seen footage of the very first experiments in the film process that was
to change the world of cinema, forever. The lecture was very ably delivered by
the world authority on the subject, par excellence - a certain Danish Gentleman
you may know, dear reader...
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More in 70mm reading:
Sebastian Rosacker's Karlsruhe
Impressions
14. Todd-AO
70mm-Festival. 28 - 30. September, 2018
Hans Haenssler's impressions from
Karlsruhe 2018
Internet link:
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