CineSavant Column
Hello!
Producer and all-round inspiration Michael Arick sent along this great link, to a new YouTube video feature by Mathieu Stern, produced with the Atlas Lens Company.
In beautiful video coverage, we see Monsieur Stern unpacking an original CinemaScope adaptor, loaned to him by a Disney Museum, from its original 1954 box. We get a quick history of how Walt Disney produced the sensational film 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea in ‘Scope when Bausch & Lomb only had a handful of lenses, initial versions that had to be separately focused from the prime 35mm lens. The lens itself weighed 25 pounds, and it had to be adapted to an underwater rig.
Mathieu finds a way to mount the old C’Scope adapter to a modern video camera, and shows us some experimental images he filmed – at the 2:55 ratio — in the Paris aquarium. It’s a very nice thought-piece about the daring days of Disney filmmaking, with old film clips and handsome new shots.
What Happened to Walt Disney’s Weird Cinema Lens?
Repeated thanks to the unsinkable Michael McQuarrie, who has sent along a brief but interesting ‘location comparison’ article for everyone favorite film about invading Gargons, Tom Graeff’s Teenagers from Outer Space. It’s on a page by Showbiz Imagery and Forgotten History.
For us types living near Hollywood, the movie really throws us — all of the locations look very familiar. The page doesn’t show locations that are easier to spot: one scene uses the main building of Hollywood High School. I think some of these locations are around Whitley Terrace, the hill bisected by the Hollywood Freeway, right where Hollywood goes into the Cahuenga Pass. One shot of a tunnel is just above Franklin Avenue. I think it goes under the Hollywood Freeway … or had that section of the freeway even been completed by when Teenagers was filmed?
I’ve copied one of the comparison shots, just above. It’s a view looking South down Las Palmas from Hollywood Boulevard. The shuttered wall on the right is what’s left of the old open-air Las Palmas newsstand that I once thought would be there forever. I include it here because this exact same view shows up often in old movies. The most notable is the famed film noir Gun Crazy. The first thing that armed robbers John Dall and Peggy Cummins do in Los Angeles, is to jump from the car to look at a newspaper. That iconic church building is prominent in the shot.
Just remember to beware of “thrill-crazed space kids blasting the flesh off humans.”
Thanks for reading! — Glenn Erickson




















