Kodachrome
40 in Super 8mm film discontinued
May 10, 2005
Kodachrome 40, the super fine grain
film stock many people used in their 8mm and Super 8mm film cameras
since 1935 has been discontinued in the Super 8mm format by Kodak.
This coincides with the 40th anniversary of the introduction of
Super 8mm film. Kodak plans to replace the Kodachrome 40 with an
Ektachrome stock Read the full press release below.
ROCHESTER, NY, May 9 -- From its
beginnings as the home movie medium of the 1960s, Super 8 film is
alive and well and serving a vital segment of today's filmmaking
industry.
Eastman Kodak Company remains
committed to providing Super 8 camera users a range of products and
creative choices. As such, Kodak has added a new color reversal film
to its Super 8 portfolio -- the super-saturated, fine grain
EKTACHROME 64T motion picture film, available in August of this
year.
"Introduced in 1965, Super 8
film has found new life with each new generation of filmmakers that
continue to embrace the format," said Bob Mayson, general
manager and vice president for Image Capture products, Entertainment
Imaging at Eastman Kodak Company. "Forty years after its
introduction, this small-gauge film still provides an easy,
inexpensive way for students and enthusiasts to work at film
resolutions and color depths as yet unmatched by the latest digital
technologies."
"In fact, many of today's great
cinematographers and directors began their careers decades ago, at
the counter of their local photo shop, buying a cartridge of Super 8
film."
"That's why Kodak has continued
to invest in the Super 8 business," he added. "And we're
just thrilled to introduce this vivid, new emulsion to the
marketplace. It's a great new product with very high image quality
and excellent color reproduction, providing our Super 8 customers
another creative tool for their toolbox."
The new 64T expands the current Super
8 portfolio that includes two black and white reversal films -- in
medium and high speeds covering a range of lighting situations.
Super 8 customers will also find
latest VISION2 technologies available in 200T and 500T speeds --
incorporating the highest quality images, improved sharpness and
grain, along with a full systems approach, optimizing the entire
imaging chain.
"With Super 8 gates now
available for high end scanners, coupled with the VISION2 film
technology advancements, Super 8 is what 16mm film used to be,"
says Mayson. "Super 8 color negative has become another option
for professionals with low budgets."
As part of the portfolio revamp,
Kodak will discontinue sales of its Super 8 Kodachrome film. Final
sales of Kodachrome Super 8 will be based on product availability
over the coming months. Sales of Kodachrome 16mm film will continue,
unaffected by this announcement.
The decision to discontinue
Kodachrome in Super 8 was driven entirely by marketplace dynamics.
"Because the 'home movie' market has shifted to digital, sales
of Kodachrome Super 8 film have declined significantly. In tandem
with that decline, the availability of processing for Kodachrome
Super 8 cartridges has diminished. In other words, fewer and fewer
labs worldwide have the machines and the chemistry necessary to
process this film emulsion in the Super 8 format," according to
Mayson.
Kodak will give customers at least a
year to process their Kodachrome Super 8 film with Kodak or to seek
an alternative.
As noted earlier, Kodak remains
committed to the Super 8 format, as evidenced by the new film
announced today, building on a product line that covers the needs of
enthusiasts, from a choice of stocks in negative, Black and White
and reversal films. Kodak's intent is to maintain the format as long
as it is supported by marketplace conditions. |