Earliest Color Film Found

BBC has posted a story about how the earliest color film has been found, just lying around in a tin can in the National Media Museum in Bradford.

The color process was forgotten because the projector did not work properly, and Edward Raymond Turner, who patented the process, died of a heart attack. The patent dates to March 22nd, 1899, but the test films date to 1902.

The BBC will show their documentary, The Race for Color, which chronicles Turner’s early color process and the restoration efforts on September 17th 2012.

This new information completely re-writes history, placing color film in 1902 and not 1909. However, color had existed in film beforehand, except it was hand painted and tinted, a tedious process indeed.

I’ll keep an eye on when this documentary may finally surface in the United States.

 

Add new comment

By clicking submit, you agree to our Comment Policy.

About the Author

Aaron Weiss is the founder and head film critic of CinemaFunk. After recieving his Master's degree in Cinema Studies from the Savannah College of Art and Design, he bides his time between web development and working at a DVD/Blu-ray retail store in Valrico, FL.

Subscribe

Get CinemaFunk movie reviews, film criticism articles, and blog posts directly to your email. No worries, no fuss, opt-out any time.

 

Feed

Have your favorite RSS feed reader automatically fetch CinemaFunk content. Learn More.