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Home movie

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Home movie made at the1939 Worlds Fairin New York.

Ahome movieis a short amateurfilmorvideotypically made just to preserve a visual record of family activities, a vacation, or a special event, and intended for viewing at home by family and friends. Originally, home movies were made onphotographic filmin formats that usually limited the movie-maker to about three minutes per roll of costly camera film. The vast majority of amateur film formats lacked audio, shootingsilent film.

The 1970s saw the advent of consumercamcordersthat could record an hour or two of video on one relatively inexpensivevideocassettewhich also had audio and did not need to be developed the way film did. This was followed by digital video cameras that recorded toflash memory,and most recentlysmartphoneswith video recording capability, made the creation of home movies easier and much more affordable to the average person.

The technological boundaries between home-movie-making and professional movie-making are becoming increasingly blurred asprosumerequipment often offers features previously only available on professional equipment.

In recent years, clips from home movies have been available to wider audiences through television series such asKato-chan Ken-chan Gokigen TV(1986 debut) in Japan,[1][2]America's Funniest Home Videos(1989 debut) in the United States,[3]You've Been Framed!(1990 debut) in Britain,[4]Video Gag(1990 debut) in France,[5]and onlinevideo sharingsites such asYouTube(founded 2005), that of users who want to share their home movies asuser-generated content.[6]The popularity of theInternet,and wider availability of high-speed connections has provided new ways of sharing home movies, such asvideo blogs(vlogs) andvideo podcasts.

History[edit]

The development of home movie-making has depended critically on the availability of equipment and media formats (film stock,video tape,etc.) at prices affordable to consumers. The introduction offilm formatssuitable for amateur hobbyists began early in the history ofcinematography.

Amateur film equipment became standardized in the 1920s and 30s with the 9.5 mm, 16 mm, and 8 mm formats. By the late 1950s, home movies became cheaper to make, becoming available to themiddle class.In the mid-1960s, Super 8's ease of use led to home movies being even more popular.[7]

17.5 mm format[edit]

The17.5 mm"Birtac" format was patented byBirt Acresin 1898.[8]This format split the standard35 mm filminto two strips half as wide and could be loaded into the camera in daylight. Since thefilm frameswere also half the height of 35 mm frames, the Birtac format used only 25% of the amount of film stock used by 35 mm. The camera doubled as a printer and projector, so equipment costs were also reduced.

9.5 mm format[edit]

In 1922, the French firmPathé Frèresintroduced a newfilm format 9.5 mm widewhich put thesprocket holesbetween the frames instead of along the sides of the film, allowing the images to occupy nearly the entire width. The resulting frames were nearly as large and clear as with the slightly later16 mm format,which devoted much of its width to the stabilizing perforations. Used both for making home movies and for showing shortened "cinema-at-home" versions of professionally made feature films, it enjoyed popularity for several decades in Europe, including the UK, but was virtually unknown in the US.

Safety film and the 16 mm format[edit]

Of importance in making motion picture film practical for home use was the manufacturing option ofsafety filmin the 1920s. Thenitrate filmused by professionals required caution in handling and projection because it is highly flammable. Nitrate film badly stored has been known tospontaneously combust.

The16 mmformat, which used only safety film, was introduced byEastman Kodakin 1923[8]and became a standard in the non-professional market. Although 16 mm had the advantage that users were not tied to one equipment manufacturer, and there were obvious cost advantages compared to standard 35 mm, the advent of an even smaller and cheaper format ultimately relegated 16 mm to professional users, particularly in the educational market.

8 mm film format and color[edit]

Bell & HowellZoomatic camera used byAbraham Zapruderthat recorded theassassination of John F. Kennedy.

In 1932,Kodakintroduced another new format,8 mm,now called "Standard 8"or" Regular 8 ", which put four frames into the area occupied by one standard 16 mm frame. The film usually came in 16 mm wide" Double 8 "form, which ran through the camera in two passes (one in each direction) and was slit in half after processing. The" Straight 8 "variant came already cut to 8 mm width. In either case, the amount of film stock used per frame was again reduced by 75%. This finally brought home movies within the reach of the average family. The smaller format also made possible smaller and more portable cameras and projectors.

The introduction ofKodachromecolorreversal filmfor 16 mm in 1935, and for 8 mm in 1936, facilitated home color cinematography. The availability of reversal film, both black-and-white and Kodachrome, was very important to the economics of home movie-making because it avoided the expense of separate negatives and positive prints.

Super 8 and Single-8 film formats[edit]

The original 8 mm format was largely superseded within a few years of Kodak's 1965 introduction ofSuper 8film. The Super 8 format used the same film width as standard 8 mm, but the perforations were smaller, making room for largerframesthat yielded a clearer image. In addition, Super 8 film came in cartridges for easier loading into the camera. High-end Super 8 also could be purchased with a magnetic audio track, allowing for synchronized sound home movies.[9]Single-8,a competing product fromFujifilm,was also introduced in 1965. It used the same new format as Super 8 but on a thinnerpolyesterbase and in a different type of camera cartridge.

Home video-making[edit]

The introduction of theBetaVCRin 1975 andVHSin 1976 heralded a revolution in the making of home movies.Videocassetteswere extremely inexpensive compared to film and they could even be erased. This had the effect of greatly increasing the hours of footage of most family video libraries. It took a few years before consumervideo camerasand portable VCRs were introduced, and later combined to createcamcorders,but by that time, many consumers already had the playback equipment in their homes.

Omnipresence and controversy[edit]

Portability and small size of digital home movie equipment, such as smartphones, has led to the banning of such devices from various places, due to privacy and security concerns.

Pornographicmovies of celebrities have been rumoured to exist for many years, but the ease of creating home movies on video has resulted in several celebrity sex tapes becoming available to the public, often without the permission of participants. The honeymoon video ofPamela AndersonandTommy Leefrom 1998 was the first highly publicized example.[10]

Portability of digital equipment helps fuel other controversies as well, such as the incident on November 17, 2006, in which comedianMichael Richardsgot into a racist war of words with an audience member during his comedy club act.[11]Large parts of the incident were captured on the camera phone of another audience member and broadcast widely.

Home movies have played important roles in controversial criminal investigations. The prime example is theZapruder filmof the 1963 assassination of U.S. PresidentJohn F. Kennedy,accidentally captured onKodachromefilm with an 8 mm home movie camera. The film became crucial evidence for theWarren Commission,which investigated the assassination.[12]At first, only black-and-white enlargements of individualfilm frameswere published, and the most gruesome frame was withheld. The public did not actually see the images in motion for many years. The first showing on network television occurred in 1975.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^"US and UK versions of TBS's" Fun TV with Kato-chan and Ken-chan "respectively celebrate their 28th and 27th anniversaries!".Japan Program Catalog.Broadcast Program Export Association of Japan. 8 June 2017.Retrieved13 June2021.
  2. ^Nicholson, Tom (2021-01-07)."Happy 30th Birthday To TV's Stupidest, Smartest Show".Esquire.Retrieved13 June2021.
  3. ^"America's Funniest Home Videos".afv.Retrieved2020-11-20.
  4. ^"You've Been Framed!".ITV.Retrieved2020-11-20.
  5. ^"Qui se souvient de l'émission video-gag?".Toluna – Opinions for all(in French).Retrieved2020-11-20.
  6. ^"FailArmy".FailArmy.Retrieved2020-11-20.
  7. ^Aasman, Susan; Fickers, Andreas; Wachelder, Joseph C. M. (2018).Materializing memories: dispositifs, generations, amateurs.New York, [New York] London Oxford: Bloomsbury Academic. p. 35.ISBN978-1-5013-3323-1.Retrieved3 December2023.
  8. ^ab"Marriott - Short History of Home Movies".marriottworld.
  9. ^"History of Home Movies".Archived fromthe originalon 2012-04-28.Retrieved2011-11-03.
  10. ^"L'histoire secrète de la sextape de Pamela Anderson et Tommy Lee".L'Obs(in French). 18 February 2016.Retrieved2020-11-20.
  11. ^"Seinfeld actor lets fly with racist tirade".the Guardian.2006-11-22.Retrieved2020-11-20.
  12. ^Rosenbaum, Ron."What Does the Zapruder Film Really Tell Us?".Smithsonian Magazine.Retrieved2020-11-20.

External links[edit]