
This film was captured from a VHS tape that lacked any audio track. It's typically
been shown over the years, as it was filmed, upside down. The film
was
shot at 6 frames per second, but displayed at 29.972 frames
per second for the TV audience. In other words, 5 times too fast.
In addition, a 3:2 pull down was done by the studio which, basically,
adds
an extra frame every 4th frame. The end result was an
upside down film being shown 4 times too fast.
I captured the video at 29.972 fps.
I then rotated the image 180 degrees and restored the colors as much as possible, given the source.
Next, I cropped the video artifacts, removed the 3:2 pull down, and
saved the resulting file
as a 320x240, 6 frames per second Quicktime
movie, using the Sorenson codec. Shown at
its original frame rate, this movie is 2 1/2 minutes long.
Why Sorenson? This video was over 225 megs before compression.
Sorenson, by far,
gives you the most compression while retaining much of the original
quality.
|
Quicktime 3, or better, to view. |