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Old 05-25-2025, 12:26 AM   #1
darry darry is offline
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Mar 2012
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Default Movies shot on film

Hi all, I want to collate a list of films shot on actual film and I have a couple questions:

1. What year should I start collating the list from to make it meaningful? Doesn't have to be down to the day but just a suggestive period of when film became the uncommon thing.

2. Is there a resource/database that I could use to search to allow me to seek out the medium films were shot on? Given Kodak are the only producers of Cinefilm (E100/250D/500T etc.) I'd imagine this is the most comprehensive resource to make the list: https://www.kodak.com/en/motion/page/shot-on-film/ but there may be outliers. Martin Eden was shot on 16mm for example but it's not on that list.
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Old 05-25-2025, 12:44 AM   #2
Juan de Internet Juan de Internet is online now
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I'm assuming from the OP that you're only interested in films made since digital capture became industry standard?

Even then I suspect it's going to be an open-ended list. Are you restricting what type of movie somehow? Because people are going to be shooting home video on 8mm probably for centuries to come. You might start by restricting to U.S. theatrical feature-length releases like some U.S. sites do.

Also Kodak may be the only maker of cinefilm now (haven't checked; just taking your word for it) but Fuji for one was making it up until 2013, well into the era of digital capture for Hollywood movies. Also, there's nothing stopping people from using already-stocked or expired film.

I haven't gone through that Kodak list carefully, but the fact that I'm even able to scroll to the bottom indicates it's nowhere near a comprehensive list of even feature-length theatrical releases. There are thousands of those alone every year. Probably millions of films worldwide total.
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Old 05-25-2025, 02:05 AM   #3
darry darry is offline
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Mar 2012
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Juan de Internet View Post
I'm assuming from the OP that you're only interested in films made since digital capture became industry standard?

Even then I suspect it's going to be an open-ended list. Are you restricting what type of movie somehow? Because people are going to be shooting home video on 8mm probably for centuries to come. You might start by restricting to U.S. theatrical feature-length releases like some U.S. sites do.

Also Kodak may be the only maker of cinefilm now (haven't checked; just taking your word for it) but Fuji for one was making it up until 2013, well into the era of digital capture for Hollywood movies. Also, there's nothing stopping people from using already-stocked or expired film.

I haven't gone through that Kodak list carefully, but the fact that I'm even able to scroll to the bottom indicates it's nowhere near a comprehensive list of even feature-length theatrical releases. There are thousands of those alone every year. Probably millions of films worldwide total.

ORWO makes cinefilm as well but there's no indication of what films have been made on it. I guess the only option is to manually search for each movie I suspect is film on IMDB or something but that doesn't sound ideal.
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