Reel, film

Use this image

Can I reuse this image without permission? Yes

Object images on the Ingenium Collection’s portal have the following Creative Commons license:

Copyright Ingenium / CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

ATTRIBUTE THIS IMAGE

Ingenium, 2011.0310.002
Permalink:

Ingenium is releasing this image under the Creative Commons licensing framework, and encourages downloading and reuse for non-commercial purposes. Please acknowledge Ingenium and cite the artifact number.

DOWNLOAD IMAGE

PURCHASE THIS IMAGE

This image is free for non-commercial use.

For commercial use, please consult our Reproduction Fees and contact us to purchase the image.

OBJECT TYPE
35 mm
DATE
1970–1980
ARTIFACT NUMBER
2011.0310.002
MANUFACTURER
GOLDBERG BROS.
MODEL
Unknown
LOCATION
Denver, Colorado, United States of America

More Information


General Information

Serial #
N/A
Part Number
2
Total Parts
12
AKA
N/A
Patents
N/A
General Description
Metal reel.

Dimensions

Note: These reflect the general size for storage and are not necessarily representative of the object's true dimensions.

Length
65.0 cm
Width
65.0 cm
Height
4.0 cm
Thickness
N/A
Weight
N/A
Diameter
N/A
Volume
N/A

Lexicon

Group
Photography
Category
Cine images
Sub-Category
N/A

Manufacturer

AKA
GOLDBERG
Country
United States of America
State/Province
Colorado
City
Denver

Context

Country
Canada
State/Province
Unknown
Period
ca. 1970-1980
Canada
For decades after its founding in 1941 the National Film Board was Canada’s largest centre for the production of films, the training of filmmakers, and the development of new film technology. Unlike the CBC, much of whose production was broadcast live, recorded on video tape, purchased from other sources, or limited to ephemeral news films, the NFB was dedicated to the production of original films for exhibition largely in the film medium. Due to its freedom from commercial pressures, its large permanent staff and its possession of its own studios and laboratories, the NFB was able to maintain high technical standards and encourage technical and stylistic innovation by its staff. From the early 1950s through the early 1960s, the National Film Board enjoyed a "golden age" with a string of award-winning documentaries and innovative animated films. Expo 67 and the NFB's showcase Labyrinth pavilion marked the apogee of the institution's political and financial fortunes. By the end of the 1960s, however, there was growing public and political disenchantment with the NFB over unsuccessful forays into feature films, a number of controversial documentaries and a decline in its output of educational and sponsored factual films. Over the next two decades, the federal government promoted the development of a commercial film industry by taking away the NFB's lucrative sponsored work (done for government departments) and providing grants and tax incentives for privately produced feature films. Henceforth the Board would increasingly limit itself to research and experimentation, the training of young filmmakers, and provision of technical and distribution services for independent producers. Board staff produced a steady supply of award-winning documentaries, dramas and animated films through the 1970s and 1980s, yet its role within the Canadian film landscape was steadily diminishing. In the last two decades, it has sharpened its focus on “social issue documentaries, auteur animation and alternative dramas” and has brought its distribution system into the digital age. Increasingly, its films are realized through a diverse range of community-based projects, programs for emerging filmmakers, and joint productions with independent producers and directors.
Function
Circular frame upon which cine film is wound for recording, storage and playback in projector.
Technical
This projector is capable of showing both 35mm and 70mm films. It appears to be a Century JJ model, which was common from the 1960s through the 1990s in movie theatres equipped for 70mm films as well as the standard 35mm prints. Releases in this large format were generally limited to a few widescreen Hollywood blockbusters per year and periodic spectacles at world fairs and the like. This example, housed in the main theatre at NFB headquarters, is equipped with a magnetic sound head (or “penthouse”) for reproducing soundtracks carried on magnetically striped film. The light source is a Strong X-60 lamp house equipped with a xenon lamp. Invented in Germany in the 1930s, xenon lamps matched carbon arc lamps in intensity and spectral characteristics but were maintenance free and clean operating. The first xenon installation in North America was in 1961. The NFB’s Labyrinth pavilion at Expo ’67 included two xenon-illuminated Century JJ-3 machines for projecting 70mm images. These were specially modified machines, however, and it is unlikely that this example is one of them. Gerald Graham’s history of NFB technical developments mentions a pair of 70mm projectors in the board’s main theatre that were used in the mid-1970s to evaluate footage for a widescreen 3-D demonstration film. This example is likely one of those and, in any event, represents the NFB’s ongoing institutional interest in the 70mm medium, which grew out of the Labyrinth project and would continue via co-productions with IMAX Corporation. Apart from our IMAX unit, we have no 70mm projectors in the collection.
Area Notes
Unknown

Details

Markings
Engraved on both sides: "MADE IN U.S.A./ [logo] GB/ DENVER COLO."
Missing
Appears complete
Finish
Silver-coloured metal reel.
Decoration
N/A

CITE THIS OBJECT

If you choose to share our information about this collection object, please cite:

GOLDBERG BROS., Reel, film, circa 1970–1980, Artifact no. 2011.0310, Ingenium – Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation, http://collection.ingeniumcanada.org/en/id/2011.0310.002/

FEEDBACK

Submit a question or comment about this artifact.

More Like This


...
Lens

2011.0310.003

Object

...
Gate, film

2011.0310.006

Object

...
Aperture

2011.0310.007

Object

...
Aperture

2011.0310.008

Object

...
Aperture

2011.0310.009

Object

...
Aperture

2011.0310.010

Object

...
Aperture

2011.0310.011

Object

...
Aperture

2011.0310.012

Object

...
Lens

2011.0310.004

Object

...
Lens

2011.0310.005

Object

...
Projector

2011.0310.001

Object

...
Cable

2011.0311.001

Object

...
Cable

2011.0311.002

Object

...
Mount, camera

2011.0296.001

Object

...
Rod

2011.0297.004

Object

...
Weight

2011.0297.002

Object

...
Weight

2011.0297.003

Object

...
Washer

2011.0297.005

Object

...
Crane, camera

2011.0297.001

Object

...
Case

2011.0297.006

Object

...
Timer

2011.0299.001

Object

...
Console, audio

2011.0306.001

Object

...
Magazine, aud…

2011.0301.002

Object

...
Recorder, tape

2011.0303.001

Object

...
Recorder-play…

2011.0304.001

Object

...
Tape, audio

2011.0300.003

Object

...
Magazine, aud…

2011.0300.002

Object

...
Splicer, film

2011.0307.001

Object

...
Synchronizer

2011.0305.001

Object

...
Synchronizer

2011.0305.002

Object

...
Control conso…

2011.0298.001

Object

...
Editor

2011.0309.001

Object

...
Recorder-play…

2011.0301.001

Object

...
Recorder-play…

2011.0300.001

Object

...
Cover

2011.0302.003

Object

...
Amplifier, re…

2011.0302.001

Object

...
Recorder-play…

2011.0308.001

Object

...
Cover

2011.0302.002

Object

...
Reel, film

1984.1132.001

Object

...
Reel, split

2010.0194.001

Object

...
Reel, split

2010.0194.002

Object

...
Projector

1992.0598.001

Object

...
Lamp, xenon

1992.0598.003

Object

...
Projector

1976.0711.001

Object

...
Projector

1976.0710.001

Object

...
Lamp, electri…

1998.0282.001

Object

...
Reel, film

2005.0073.002

Object

...
Projector

1980.0435.001

Object

...
Reel, film

1998.0287.002

Object

...
Projector

1994.0453.001

Object

...
Projector

2002.0170.001

Object

...
Projector

1998.0287.001

Object

...
Box

2016.0448.047

Object

...
Battery

2016.0448.008

Object

...
Battery

2016.0448.009

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.038

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.011

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.015

Object

...
Lens part

2016.0448.017

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.020

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.039

Object

...
Projector

1996.0341.001

Object

...
Potentiometer

1999.0121.001

Object

...
Reel, film

1970.0408.002

Object

...
Projector

1997.0426.001

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.036

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.002

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.006

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.007

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.012

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.018

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.019

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.021

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.025

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.027

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.029

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.032

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.035

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.037

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.040

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.041

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.044

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.045

Object

...
Hardware coll…

2016.0448.042

Object

...
Rewind

2010.0189.002

Object

...
Reel, film

1997.0481.002

Object

...
Case, project…

2005.0073.004

Object

...
Projector

1987.1116.001

Object

...
Camera part

2016.0448.024

Object

No image available.
Reel, film

1994.0457.003

Object

...
Reel, film

1981.0051.005

Object

...
Reel, film

1981.0051.006

Object

...
Reel, film

1981.0051.007

Object

...
Reel, film

1981.0051.008

Object

...
Reel, film

1981.0051.009

Object

...
Reel, film

1981.0051.004

Object

...
Cable

2005.0073.003

Object

...
Rewind

2010.0189.001

Object

...
Projector

2005.0073.001

Object

...
Reel, film

1981.0051.002

Object