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Morten Skallerud visits in70mm.com
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Read more
at
in70mm.com
The 70mm Newsletter
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Written
by: Thomas Hauerslev |
Date:
31.05.2008 |
Taking
a look at a roll of decomposing 70mm film. Photo by Maria Hauerslev
On Tuesday 27. May 2008, Norwegian Film maker Morten Skallerud visited
the in70mm.com head quarter.
The menu of the evening was cooked chicken with potatoes, salat and an
Italian wine, which, according to the guest was "Excellent".
Morten Skallerud (1954) is world famous, not least in Norway, and his
reputation reaches very far and wide.
His comany in Olso is called Camera Magica and produces short films,
commercial films, and specializes in visual effects and camera work for
other production companies
Morten was in Copenhagen on official film restoration business.
The unique footage is being digitally scanned by the Digital Film Lab, a Copenhagen company
specializing in digital restoration.
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More
in 70mm reading:
"A Year
Along the Abandoned Road"
"Where The Trains Used To
Go"
"The making of" Tanakh Bibelen al-Quran
Internet link:
Camera Magica
Morten Skallerud
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Morten
is taking a good look of the world through an original Todd-AO
viewfinder.
Morten Skallerud is responsible for restoring three rolls of original 35mm nitrate negatives from
fellow Norwegian Roald Amundsen's visit to the South Pole on 14 December
1911.
After Amundsen's return from the South Pole he travelled the world and
showed film and stills when he lectured about the endeavour. A number of
film versions were made, all very different.
As Morten said "No one on the South Pole Team knew much about using a
film camera, so many of the pictures are quite bad. But the material is
very interesting indeed, first of all because it is authentical footage
from one of the really great expeditions!"
Upon his return to Norway the following day, Morten carried the three
rolls with him on the ferry to Oslo. Sending inflammable nitrate film by
air is not a good idea in our days.
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The
Todd-AO 64 degree lens and Morten.
Morten is his own
Film director and cameraman and he has worked in the Norwegian film
industry since the late 1970s.
Morten is a well known name within the 70mm film community pioneering a
special filming technique called "nature animation". Nature animation is
very time consuming, as every frame of the film is taken one by one, rather
than as a continuous "stream of frames".
He premiered this technique with the award winning 70mm short film "A Year
Along the Abandoned Road",
which he photographed nearly 20 years ago.
In 2003, he followed that project up with a second project also done in
nature animation. Only this time Morten photographed it in the IMAX format.
The second film is the 4-minute short "Where The Trains Used To
Go".
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Looking
at some of Morten's anaglyph 3D projects on a laptop computer. Thomas, Maria
and Morten is seeing the world in 3D.
Morten is currently working on two different 3D projects in 35mm and has
recently complete a 65mm project ["The making of" Tanakh Bibelen al-Quran] for an art company in Bergen, Norway.
The project included filming the text of the Bible, the Koran and the Torah.
No titles, just filming each double page on three 65mm frames, and then
another double page and so on.
Just 4 minutes in 70mm DTS. I hope to have more on that
project very soon.
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Finally,
taking a look at the in70mm.com web site and coverage of filmmaker's "Where
the Trains Used to Go" short film.
After 4 hours it was time to depart and Morten walked back to his hotel next
to the central station.
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Updated
28-07-24 |
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