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Excerpt from the surviving fragment of With Our King and Queen Through India (1912), the first feature-length film in natural colour, filmed in Kinemacolor. This is a list of early feature-length colour films (including primarily black-and-white films that have one or more color sequences) made up to about 1936, when the Technicolor three-strip process firmly established itself as the major ...
Distributor and color conversion company Above and Beyond: 1952: 1992: Turner Entertainment [1] [2] The Absent-Minded Professor: 1961: 1986: The Walt Disney Company [3] (Color Systems Technology) [4] [a] An Ache in Every Stake: 1941: 2004: Columbia Pictures (West Wing Studios) [7] Across the Pacific: 1942: 1987: Turner Entertainment [8] Action ...
The earlier Tarzan films were silent pictures adapted from the original Tarzan novels which appeared within a few years of the character's creation. With the advent of talking pictures, a popular Tarzan movie franchise was developed, which was anchored by actor Johnny Weissmüller in the title role, which lasted from 1932 to 1948.
The first color systems that appeared in motion pictures were additive color systems. Additive color was practical because no special color stock was necessary. Black-and-white film could be processed and used in both filming and projection. The various additive systems entailed the use of color filters on both the movie camera and projector ...
The book and movie were then adapted into a Broadway musical that opened in 2005 and ran until 2008, starring LaChanze and later American Idol Season 3 winner Fantasia Barrino.
Giallo (1933 film) - technically an Italian film, based on the Wallace novel The Man Who Changed His Mind; Mystery Liner (1934) The Man Who Changed His Name (1934) Sanders of the River (1935) The Crimson Circle (1936) Strangers on Honeymoon (1936) adapted from the novel The Northing Tramp; The Squeaker (1937) a.k.a. Murder on Diamond Row; The ...
That year, the company released the first dramatic film made in the process, By The Order of Napoleon. In 1911, the Scala Theatre became Urban's flagship venue for showing Kinemacolor films, which included From Bud to Blossom (1910), Unveiling of the Queen Victoria Memorial (1911), Coronation of George V (1911), The Investiture of The Prince of ...
This was the first time that a new feature film was created by scanning and digitizing recorded film footage for the purpose of removing or manipulating colors. The black-and-white-meets-color world portrayed in the movie was filmed entirely in color; in all, approximately 163,000 frames of 35 mm footage were scanned, in order to selectively ...