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Well, the Criterion booklet refers to a 1975 restoration by the Swedish Film Institute where a 35 mm B&W duplicate negative was created from two source elements: an incomplete B&W nitrate print with Swedish intertitles, and an incomplete colour-tinted nitrate print with English intertitles.James-Masaki_Ryan wrote:Where does it say that the Criterion’s restoration was done in 2011?
Dear Ulrich,
Thanks for your mail.
Your information about the 1975 restoration of Körkarlen (Victor Sjöström, 1921) is correct, which was carried out by the Swedish Film Institute at the FilmTeknik lab in Stockholm. From this negative, colour prints were made, using the colours in one of the positive nitrate prints (used as the source for the negative) as reference. This colour process from b/w negative was done by filters. In 1998, new 35mm print was made from the same negative, at Nordisk Film Post Production lab in Stockholm (ex FilmTeknik) using the so called Desmet method to recreate the colours.
I'm afraid I have no information on the 1998 transfer, but rights holder AB Svensk Filmindustri / SF Studios have over the years at various times had access to the negative.
Regarding the digital transfers made from this negative, I can confirm that the rights holder AB Svensk Filmindustri / SF Studios again had access to this negative in 2011, when a digital transfer was made at Chimney Pot, used for the Criterion release.
In 2015, the duplicate negative was digitized by the Swedish Film Institute's in-house digital lab in 2K resolution, from which the DCP screened at the Toute la mémoire du monde festival at la Cinémathéque française was made.
Kind regards,
Jon
Brent_Reid wrote:Great email, Ulrich! Could you possibly ask him exactly what additional digital work was carried out on the transfers in 2011 and 2015?
Brent_Reid wrote:Also, why was it scanned and transferred twice in such a short space of time?
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