View allAll Photos Tagged 4K-Scan

Crane and bridge over the Weser river

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

Bremen Schnoor.

Installation on a house wall.

Scenic Schnoor Quarter in Bremen, Germany.

Light and shade.

Film photography

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 processed and 4k-scanned by Silbersalz35

 

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70

 

Münster

Hotel Facade

Hotel Atlantic

Modern architecture

Film is not dead

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta Manual Focus

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD 35-70 f/3.5

St. Nikolai Memorial

#MinoltaXD5

#Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

#Silbersalz 050D

#ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

German Port Museum Hamburg

 

The museum shows not only old equipment like ships, cranes, and locomotives, but more what it was really like to work in a port. Great place to visit for a few hours.

 

4 Masted Steel Ship Peking

Flying P-Liner

Hansa-Hafen

Deutsches Hafenmuseum

Flying P-Liner

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peking_(ship)

HansThe museum shows what it was really like to work in a port.a-Hafen

Deutsches Hafenmuseum

Flying P-Liner

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peking_(ship)

 

Film is not dead

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 processed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

Hamburg Harbor

Landungsbrücken

Cruise Days

Nicko Cruises - Vasco da Gama

Cap San Diego

 

FilmIsNotDead

Silbersalz 050D

ECN2developed and 14K scanned by Silbersalz35

Downsampled to medium resolution

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

 

Hexenbürgermeisterhaus

Museum

In harsh sunlight

 

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5 manual focus

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

 

Rathaus des Westfälischen Friedens

The peace of Westphalia ended the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648).

The historic town hall of Münster, where one of the two treaties was signed in 1648.

Two treaties were signed to end the war after peace negotiations in Münster and Osnabrück.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_of_Westphalia

 

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

Silbersalz35 050D

ECN2 processed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Persil Clock in Münster, Germany

Harbor Market in Münster

Persil -Uhr am Hafenmarkt Münster

Kodak Gold

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35, 14K scan available

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD 35-70 f/3.5

Film is not dead

Alte Oberpostdirektion

Stephansplatz

 

Silbersalz35 050D (Kodak Vision3)

Developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

silbersalz35.com/

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/.5

Ammonite in a former quarry

Porta Westfalica, Jakobsberg

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned

Film s not dead.

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

 

Kurpark Bad Oeynhausen

Spa Park Bad Oeynhausen

Re-entry picture

Film Photography

Silbersalz35

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

silbersalz35.com/

 

#MinoltaDynax500SI

#MinoltaAF35-70

#FujifilmC200

 

German Port Museum Hamburg

 

Film is not dead

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 processed and 4K scanned by #Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

Exibition of historic bicycles in Lemgo, Germany

 

Kodak Ektar 100

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silberslaz35

Monolta XD5 manual focus camera

Minolta MD 35-70 f/3.5

Stadthafen

Sculpture in front of Kunsthalle Münster

Münster,. Germany

 

Gold and blue sky with Kodak Gold

Film is not dead

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 processed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz

Minolta XD5

Minolta M'D35-70 f/3.5

   

Oat

Kodak Gold

Film is not dead

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

Mausoleum Bückeburg

Silbersalz 050D

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mausoleum_B%C3%BCckeburg

 

Cereals - barley

Grain

Kodak Gold

Film is not dead

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

Trees in October

Lemgo, Lippe

Kodak Ektar 100

ECN2 processed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD50 f/1.7

Film is not dead

Until we get a 4K scan of "Return of the Jedi" (which is supposedly either done or being done but not commercially available), it is very tough to track tiny details of the Endor landing platform.

One of them is the Control Room (as I call it), seen somewhat to the right of the middle of the upper section of this photo. As I was almost finished with that side of the platform, today I decided to rip it apart and redesign quite a chunk of it to.... give a small lamp to the soldier sitting in the Control Room :) . It's classic 9V, it's green and I absolutely love it! :D

 

In the Spa Gardens of Bad Oeynhausen

Winter says goodbye

 

Fujifilm c200 (made in USA)

Minolta Dynax 500SI

Minolta AF 35-70

ECN2 developed and 4k scanned by SILBERSALZ35

silbersalz35.com/

City Hall and a few of Hamburg's main churches and spires.

City Hall on the left and St. Catherine Church on the right.

Shot from the Plaza of the Elbe Philharmonic Hall (Elbphilharmonie)

The spire of St. Nicholas Church (Nikolai Memorial, only the tower and a small part of the church's ruin is standing) remains the tallest with 147 m (482 ft.)

Silbersalz 050D (Cine film)

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

 

Minotla XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

 

"Tausendjährige" Eiche in Papenhausen

"Thousand-year-old" oak tree in Papenhausen, Lippe, Germany

Silbersalz 050D

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz36

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD50mm f/1.7

 

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

Deutschland

Segelschulschiff Deutschland

schulschiff-deutschland.de/

 

Bremerhaven, Havenwelten, Sail 2024

Film is not dead.

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

  

Patriotische Gesellschaft

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriotische_Gesellschaft_von_1765

  

Analog photography

Film is not dead

 

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 processed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

 

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

 

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

Gruner und Jahr

RTL Building and Elphi

 

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

St. Petri Church

The oldest church and one of the five main churches in Hamburg

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

The Film Photography Project is teaming up with sister company Film Media to offer 4k restoration and scanning for all motion picture films!

Planten un Blomen

Radisson Blue Hotel Tower in the background

Spring is coming

 

Silbersalz 050D (Cine Film)

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

Rickmer Rickmers

#RickmerRickmers #Hamburg #Elbphilharmonie #HafenCity

Film is not dead

Rickmer Rickmers backlit in the early morning sun

Hamburg

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD 35-70 f/3.5

Silbersalz35 050D (Kodak Vision Cine Film)

Developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Elbe Philharmonic Hall, Crane, and Street Lamp

Sandtorhafen Kaiserkai

Silbersalz35 050D

Motion Picture Film for Stills

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta Rokkor 50mm f/1.7

Hamburg City Hall

Tower and rooftop with ornaments and statues

Shot from the courtyard

Film is not dead

Kodak Gold 200

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

silbersalz35.com/

Minolta XD

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

 

Münster, Westphalia

St. Paulus Cathedral in the foreground

Liebfrauen-Überwasserkirche in the background

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD 35-70 f/3.5

Silbersalz35 050D Motion Picture Film

ECN2 processed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Rickmer Rickmers

Hamburg Landungsbrücken

Große Hafenrundfahrt

 

Silbersalz 050D

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

 

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

I picked up an old Zorki 4K rangefinder camera made in the Soviet Union in 1977. I put a roll of Kentmere 400 black and white film through it to test it out with a Jupiter 8 50mm lens. It's the first time I've shot on film since I was around eight years old, and the first time I've ever used a rangefinder.

City tour bus in front of a five-star hotel

Hotel Vier Jahreszeiten

Hop On Hop Off

Film is not dead.

Kodak Gold 200

Minolta XD5

Minolta MD35-70 f/3.5

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

silbersalz35.com/

MARTa Herford

Statue of Tupac Shakur by Paolo Chiasera

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MARTa_Herford

 

Kodak Ektar 100

ECN2 developed and 4K scanned by Silbersalz35

Minolta XD5

Minolta 35-70 f/3.5

Cineaste365 (January 20, 2014 - DAY 101) - My first time watching “Shoah” several years ago, it was difficult.

 

Each time you watch a documentary about the Holocaust, you think you have learned all you can about the atrocities, that you have learned about the anguish, despair that took place at the death camps, at the forests, inside the trains.

 

But when I watched “Shoah”, the documentary reminded me that for every person that lived at that time, those who escaped from the camps, those who survived the camps that were left for dead, those who lived by the camps and those who were involved in the murder of millions, you realize that it is not possible to know everything.

 

“Shoah” was a film that I regard as a masterpiece. Not because it focused on the holocaust but how director Claude Lanzmann persevered in getting the interviews from survivors, villagers and how far he went into getting interviews from those who were Nazi’s that worked in the death camps.

 

This is a documentary that began in 1974, filmed in 14 countries, trimmed to 9 1/2 hours with over hundreds of hours of footage. Footage that managed to get people to discuss their memories of one of the most difficult events in their lives and document it. And within those eleven years of making the documentary, some of those interviewed were no longer alive by the release of the final cut of the film.

 

Unlike Alain Resnais’ 1955 film “Night and Fog” that used images of people’s faces before they were massacred, people starved and left to die, images of mountains of hair shaved off people’s heads, skin from those who died or tortured and now were being used for artwork and soap. Images of people being bulldozed, burned to death, people with their flesh rotting, heads that were removed from their bodies, torture chambers and more. “Shoah” is not that type of film.

 

Resnais’ use of these graphic images is where the intended goal was for the audience to witness inhumanity. Humanity at its worse and you are just sickened to your stomach and haunted by these images because you are literally in disbelief that these terrible things were done.

 

With “Shoah”, it’s a buildup of recollections from people who lived in areas where Jewish thrived but also areas where concentration camps were created and we get a better understanding from eyewitnesses who saw the trains come to their village and how they tried to warn them. We learn from those who survived about having to get the dead or their ashes and clean things up, discovering friends and also loved ones and whichever year these interviews were recorded, decades after World War II, the memories still haunt them, still hurt them and as a viewer today, you can’t help but feel heartbroken and sickened by how the innocent were tricked or how some were abused before they were to be killed.

 

From the men and women taken to gas camps and were buried and then burned. To the children and elderly walked to a middle of the field until they saw nothing, until they got closer and saw the pit of the dead and for them being shot behind the neck and being killed.

 

From the day I first saw this documentary and watching it again, not only does it bring me chills, not only does it make me want to cry and get angry, it is completely devastating to learn the evil and dark side of humanity and with many people interviewed for “Shoah”, knowing that these are just a few stories that were told but yet there are many stories that have yet to be told or never will be told as over 70-years have passed since then.

 

It was one thing to watch the heartbreaking news of how many died or committed suicide but then to hear from villagers who were racists towards the Jewish people of their city and possibly one of the most damning interviews in a documentary, Claude Lanzmann’s interview with Nazi Franz Suchomel who seemed so proud of what he did, as if he worked with honor and felt no remorse as he discussed how people died with such pomposity.

 

Needless to say, there are many moments of thought-provoking answers to Lanzmann’s questions but one can’t help but be amazed that Lanzmann was able to get such an interview from a Nazi perspective.

 

As for the Blu-ray release of “Shoah”, as mentioned earlier, I owned the 2010 Masters of Cinema UK DVD set of “Shoah” but having watched the Criterion Collection release, there really is no comparison as the Criterion Collection version of “Shoah” is a 5-star release.

 

From better picture quality thanks to its 2012-2013 digital restoration and 4K scan, picture quality is much clearer, much better and less noisy and cleaner without the white specks. Colors are much better to look at and the dialogue features no hiss or hum, pops or crackle, the documentary looks incredible and sounds very good!

 

But as “Shoah” is a masterpiece, this Blu-ray release from the Criterion Collection is essentially a grand slam because also included are Lanzmann’s three other films.

 

“A Visitor from the Living” about Maurice Rossel, a Swiss Red Cross member who wrote a positive report about how Jewish were free and it was a safe-haven for Jewish people, but in truth, the Nazi prepared and were trained how to act when the Red Cross inspectors arrived. But more surprising is Rossel’s comments in the interview and all I can say is prepare to be shocked. I was left speechless by this film. Words can not describe my anger after hearing Rossel’s comments.

 

“Sobibor, October 14, 1943, 4p.m.” is Lanzmann’s film about Yehuda Lerner who participated in the uprising in the Sobribor camp, which was discussed towards the later part of the “Shoah” documentary but an incredible testament to hope and how this uprising was executed. Another fantastic film included in the “Shoah” release!

 

“The Karski Report” which is a film that was created to refute Yannick Haenel’s novel but feature more of the interviews with Jan Karski from 1975. We learn about this in “Shoah” but even more detail especially the political side of Karski trying to reach out to the international community about what the Nazi’s did to the Jews. Another important film from Claude Lanzmann and so glad for its inclusion on the Blu-ray release.

 

The interviews with Lanzmann are also featured on the Blu-ray. Most shocking is the “On Shoah” 2013 interview which is exclusive to the Criterion Collection release in which Lanzmann discusses how he got Franz Suchomel (the Nazi) on “Shoah”. A fascinating interview! Also, is the “2003″ interview in which Lanzmann talks about “A Visitor from the Living” and “”Sobibor, October 14, 1943, 4p.m.”

 

And you also get an interview between Caroline Champetier (the camera operator for “Shoah”) and filmmaker Arnaud Desplechin plus a 62-page booklet.

 

Overall, this is the best documentary release I have seen from The Criterion Collection. Not only do you get Claude Lanzmann’s epic, very important and groundbreaking 1985 documentary “Shoah” but you also get three more important Claude Lanzmann films included in this Blu-ray release as well.

 

As a long time collector and reviewer of Criterion Collection releases, “Shoah – The Criterion Collection #663″ is a magnificent 5-star release that is highly recommended!

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

Arriflex IIb

Angenieux f/2.2 18.5mm

Kodak Vision3 50D 5203

Frame from the film "Ocean of Time" (2017)

4K scan by Gamma Ray Digital

4k scan of this pic from an auction site.

As imagined in future year 1990.

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

In 1933 Montclair NJ resident Arthur B Holmes shot 3 rolls of 16mm home movies on his Ciné-Kodak camera at the Lake Valhalla Club in Montville, NJ. Oven McCafferty gives a brief overview of the discovery and the new 2022 4k scan and sound mix by The Film Photography Project.

Blog (with video) - filmphotographyproject.com/1933-found-footage-the-lost-fi...

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