Wikipedia:Reference desk/Archives/Entertainment/2018 November 10
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November 10
editWhen did the norm change from monochrome to colour feature films?
editAfter the introduction of colour film in the 1930s (e.g. The Wizard of Oz and Gone With the Wind), it remained the norm for quite some years for feature films to be shot in black-and-white. Gradually colour became predominant, and for a long time now colour has been the default assumption, although some b/w films continue to be made (e.g. Good Night and Good Luck.).
So, exactly when did the default change from monochrome to colour? I realise that this cannot be pinned down to one specific year, but there must be a range before which monochrome was the norm and after which colour was the norm. This may vary by country to some degree. -- Jack of Oz [pleasantries] 03:48, 10 November 2018 (UTC)
- This article gives a range of "Late 1950s" and notes that by the 1960s, the choice to shoot in color was no longer financial, but was a largely artistic choice. Both that article and this article note the introduction of single-strip processes in the early 1950s led to the rapid, widespread adoption of color by the end of the decade; prior color film processes used expensive, three-strip processes (separate negatives for cyan, magenta, and yellow) that made the process slow, time consuming, and expensive, and it was the technological leap to a single-strip color processing (both cite Eastmancolor as the process) that made the transition to mostly color film happen. --Jayron32 04:42, 10 November 2018 (UTC)
- That late, eh. Thanks for the info, Jayron. -- Jack of Oz [pleasantries] 19:34, 10 November 2018 (UTC)
I suggest that for Hollywood at least, the best date for the division is a bit later: the mid to late 1960s.
At one time the Oscars had separate award categories for Best Cinematography in color and in B&W. This began with the awards for 1939 and ended with the awards for 1966, when the B&W nominees were The Fortune Cookie, Georgy Girl, Is Paris Burning?, Seconds, and Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?. To me at least, this list (and particularly the first two entries) suggests that B&W was still being used sometimes at that time for financial reasons.
In an attempt to get actual data on this, I went to the IMDB's outdated raw data files available here. (The IMDB makes current data available here, but it does not include as much information as the older files.)
I extracted a list of all US or UK movies (only including actual movies, not TV-movies and other things the IMDb lists) for which color information was available, and counted how many were in color and how many in B&W. Note that I did not attempt to limit the list to feature films; some of the movies listed will be shorts and some will be documentaries.
Anyway, for the period 1930 to 1980, this is what I found:
Year B&W Color 1930 1419 92 (6.1%) 1931 1454 25 (1.7%) 1932 1323 23 (1.7%) 1933 1276 33 (2.5%) 1934 1336 62 (4.4%) 1935 1276 124 (8.9%) 1936 1243 126 (9.2%) 1937 1253 142 (10.2%) 1938 1141 165 (12.6%) 1939 967 190 (16.4%) 1940 974 171 (14.9%) 1941 1033 186 (15.3%) 1942 971 213 (18.0%) 1943 838 191 (18.6%) 1944 743 214 (22.4%) 1945 757 213 (22.0%) 1946 728 254 (25.9%) 1947 670 259 (27.9%) 1948 706 295 (29.5%) 1949 727 278 (27.7%) 1950 679 283 (29.4%) 1951 643 310 (32.5%) 1952 538 353 (39.6%) 1953 513 402 (43.9%) 1954 387 420 (52.0%) 1955 363 424 (53.9%) 1956 357 397 (52.7%) 1957 459 314 (40.6%) 1958 361 283 (43.9%) 1959 312 295 (48.6%) 1960 293 288 (49.6%) 1961 321 319 (49.8%) 1962 327 330 (50.2%) 1963 257 399 (60.8%) 1964 297 450 (60.2%) 1965 340 532 (61.0%) 1966 265 561 (67.9%) 1967 198 664 (77.0%) 1968 227 691 (75.3%) 1969 182 757 (80.6%) 1970 110 1088 (90.8%) 1971 94 1072 (91.9%) 1972 81 960 (92.2%) 1973 70 945 (93.1%) 1974 68 916 (93.1%) 1975 65 864 (93.0%) 1976 85 919 (91.5%) 1977 74 768 (91.2%) 1978 68 824 (92.4%) 1979 62 762 (92.5%) 1980 64 729 (91.9%)
This data is consistent with what I said at the start.
I would also suggest that in addition to the availability of Eastmancolor film, an additional reason for the change taking place at this time is the desire to compete with television. At least in the US, NTSC color TV broadcasting began in the 1950s, but initially color TVs were too expensive for most viewers. As the price came down over time, more people could watch TV in color, movies still made in B&W must have suffered in comparison.
--76.69.46.228 (talk) 23:38, 10 November 2018 (UTC)
- Thanks for the data. So it looks like colour first outstripped b/w in 1954, lasted for only 2 years, then dropped back sharply in 1957 and didn't recover until 1962. What could explain this? -- Jack of Oz [pleasantries] 21:38, 11 November 2018 (UTC)
- One out of every eleven US/UK cinematically released movies in 1980 was black and white? That does not pass the sniff test for me. Would you be able to post the list somewhere? It's bad form to rely on memory - especially mine - but I just find that very jarring. Matt Deres (talk) 23:30, 11 November 2018 (UTC)
- Sorry, I discarded the data after constructing the table and I don't feel like reconstructing it. I suspect the B&W "movies" were the sort that never gets a wide release. --76.69.46.228 (talk) 08:32, 12 November 2018 (UTC)
- Using the data in WP, five US films from 1980 were in B&W, out of 229 in total, and one UK film from 1980 was B&W, out of 47 films. Lugnuts Fire Walk with Me 15:50, 12 November 2018 (UTC)
- Re The Longest Day (film) which was shot in monochrome in 1962 and "was the most expensive black-and-white film made until 1993, when Schindler's List was released" according to our article. Another article, WAR ON FILM – The Longest Day, says that Darryl F Zanuck "wanted it shot in black and white to look realistic and like most of the archive film of the war".
- Earlier British war films, such as Sink the Bismarck! (1960), were shot in monochrome so that wartime newsreel footage could be spliced into the action sequences, reducing the reliance on unconvincing models of ships and aeroplanes. See BRITISH WAR FILMS, 1939 - 45 (p. 150) by S. P. Mackenzie. Malta Story (1953) is another British war film which makes liberal use of archive newsreels, especially the climactic scene of the arrival of SS Ohio. Also Reach for the Sky (1956) which I think used actual gun camera footage to enliven the dogfight scenes.
- Alansplodge (talk) 18:05, 12 November 2018 (UTC)
Extended content for thems that cares. Matt Deres (talk) 20:04, 14 November 2018 (UTC) |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Reposted from my talk page (this page is semi-protected so the user could not post here directly). As Lugnuts and others have indicated above, it's trickier than expected to identify this stuff. Matt Deres (talk) 20:04, 14 November 2018 (UTC) With regard to your "sniff test" remark here, now that I had some time I decided to examine the 64 movies that my previous computations gave as the number of B&W releases in the year 1980. I had assumed previously that there would not be a significant number of double-counted movies, i.e. those shown as both color and B&W because they contained segments of each. But in fact 27 of the 64 were in this category. Those titles were: Agee (1980); At the Fountainhead (of German Strength) (1980); Barnes & Barnes: Fish Heads (1980); The Big Red One (1980); Blue Suede Shoes (1980); Broken Nights (1980); Ecstatic Stigmatic (1980); Fantastic (1980); Fist of Fear, Touch of Death (1980); Fixation (1980); Generations of Resistance (1980); Ghosts of Cape Horn (1980); Journeys from Berlin/1971 (1980); The Last Prom (1980); Life Dances On... (1980); The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter (1980); Lion of the Desert (1980); Memories of Duke (1980); The Mirror Crack'd (1980); Musing (1980); Popeye (1980); Raging Bull (1980); The Sea Wolves (1980); Send in the Clowns (1980); Tell Me a Riddle (1980); This Is America Part 2 (1980); The Trials of Alger Hiss (1980). I have not attempted to look up their IMDB pages to find further information. I did look up the other 37, the ones shown only as B&W. (I did this manually, so there may be occasional errors.) And as I suspected, most were documentaries or shorts. Specifically, there were:
And that leaves 6 features for your sniff test:
Now that the page has been semi-protected again, I hope you will post find this interesting enough to post part or all of this data in the thread for me as you see fit. --76.69.46.228 (talk) 22:50, 13 November 2018 (UTC)
In the 1950s, several of the blackand-white films were B movies and associated low-budget products. JMost of the films of Ed Wood, for example, were black-and-white. By the 1960s, even the low-budget films were switching to color. Per our article on the B movie:
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