johnl3d Posted June 4, 2014 Share Posted June 4, 2014 early.mp4 okay stop laughing Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Admin Rodney Posted June 4, 2014 Admin Share Posted June 4, 2014 Now there is a bit of history. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hash Fellow robcat2075 Posted June 4, 2014 Hash Fellow Share Posted June 4, 2014 Cool! That is somewhat more advanced than my first attempt, also with a super 8 camera. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Bigboote Posted June 4, 2014 Share Posted June 4, 2014 Yup- those were the days- I had regular 8mm. Did a LOT of messing around with cutout art (I'd had no exposure to the concept of 'cels') I was just figuring things out... one of the cool things I devised (NO outside influence) was that I could take my old exposed 8mm film, put it in our cheap black and white photographic enlarger, and trace the images I saw focused on the exposure board... I later learned this was known as 'rotoscoping' when I read that Ralph Bakshi used the same technique. My stuff was REALLY BAD too- I enjoyed Snoopy tho! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fae_alba Posted June 4, 2014 Share Posted June 4, 2014 Ah the memories... as a young whipper snapper of the 70's I dug up my dad's super 8 and old movies that he made in Okinawa right after WWII. One of these was of an anit-aircraft drill, where they (attempt) to shoot a target being towed by an aircraft. I had a balsa wood model airplane i built, so being the budding film maker, I put a firecracker in it's tail, lit it and sent the plan a-flying, all with the camera rolling. Plan was to splice the two clips together. While I still have a bunch of my pop's movies, I can't seem to find that footage now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hash Fellow robcat2075 Posted June 4, 2014 Hash Fellow Share Posted June 4, 2014 I remember my super-8 camera was my first bit of serious dissonance with my dad. $50 for... a movie camera? Oh dear, oh dear oh dear! The problem wasn't that it was a movie camera, it was that I spent money at all. Even my own money that I made on my paper route. And there was more hand wringing every time I spent $3.50 to get some film developed at the Fotomat. Remember the Fotomat? You'd take your film to a girl sitting in a tiny shed in the middle of a parking lot. It sounds crazy to say that. It didn't even appear to have a door on it. I just figured she must be crawling in thru the window every morning. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
johnl3d Posted June 4, 2014 Author Share Posted June 4, 2014 I wonder where the rest room was in those booths.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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